Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Cosby convicted of drugging, molesting woman at his home

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia.com

Addressing Cosby, O’Neill said, “You are not to leave this commonweal­th. You are not to leave this county without further court action.”

It was the second trial for Cosby. Cosby’s first trial last June ended in a mistrial when a jury selected from Allegheny County couldn’t reach a verdict.

With the verdict, the latest jury found that Cosby sexually assaulted Constand while she was unconsciou­s and without her consent.

Steele, flanked by Constand and co-prosecutor­s Kristen Feden and M. Stewart Ryan, said Constand came to the county for justice and the jury provided it. Steele, during a news conference, thanked the jurors for “their diligence and sacrifices they made” during the 14-day trial.

“We’re finally in a place to say that justice was done. We have shown from our record that money and power or who you are will not stop us from a criminal investigat­ion or prosecutin­g a case,” Steele said.

“What was revealed through this investigat­ion was a man who had spent decades preying on women that he drugged and sexually assaulted and a man who had evaded this moment here today for far too long,” Steele added on Thursday. “He used his celebrity. He used his wealth. He used his network of supporters to help him conceal his crimes. Now, we know who the real Bill Cosby was.”

Steele, his voice quivering with emotion at times, characteri­zed Constand as “a courageous person” who stood up in public against Cosby.

“Her courage, her resilience, in the face of horrible, unfounded attacks upon her and her family, has been so inspiring to the hopeless,” Steele said.

During the retrial, Steele was permitted to call five additional women, who accused Cosby of sexual misconduct between the years 1982 and 1996, to testify, including model Janice Dickinson, who testified Cosby raped her during a 1982 meeting in his hotel room in Lake Tahoe, Nevada. During Cosby’s first trial last June, O’Neill permitted only one other accuser to testify.

“We are humbled by the courage that all of them showed,” Steele said.

As the verdict was announced, several other women who accuse Cosby of uncharged sexual conduct and who were in the courtroom, wept uncontroll­ably and hugged one another.

“Justice has been done! We’re very, very happy and proud of this result,” well-known celebrity lawyer Gloria Allred, who represents many of the other accusers, said after the verdict. “In the beginning, many were not believed. We are so happy that finally we can say, women are believed and not only on hashtag MeToo but in a court of law…and we thank the jury so much for that. And yes, the MeToo movement has arrived and is well and is living in Montgomery County and throughout this nation and throughout this world.”

Allred read statements from some of the five other accusers who testified during the trial, including Janice Baker-Kinney, a former bartender at Harrah’s casino in Reno, Nev., who testified Cosby had sexual contact with her during a pizza party at a guest house in 1982.

“I am overwhelme­d with joy, relief and gratitude, joy that finally justice has been served, relief that the years of this toxic chain of silence has been broken and we can now move forward with our heads held high,” Baker-Kinney said in a statement read by Allred.

As the verdict was announced, scores of local residents, activists with bubbles and signs supporting victims of sexual assault and throngs of media crowded the steps and sidewalk outside the courthouse waiting for the trial’s players to emerge. Media helicopter­s hovered overhead. Passersby in vehicles honked horns, apparently welcoming the verdict.

When Cosby, who reportedly is legally blind, emerged with his legal team and publicists, he did not comment but held his hand high at one point. Lead defense lawyer Thomas Mesereau Jr. only said that Cosby will appeal the conviction.

During the trial, Steele, Feden and Ryan described Cosby as a trusted mentor who betrayed the friendship he had with Constand and said the criminal case was “about trust…about betrayal.” Prosecutor­s alleged Cosby plied Constand with “three blue pills” and proceeded to sexually assault her while she visited his home to discuss her career.

Prosecutor­s argued Constand did not have the ability to consent to sexual contact.

Constand, 45, of Ontario, Canada, testifying 7 ½ hours over two days last week, said after taking the blue pills she began slurring her words and was unable to fight off Cosby’s sexual advances. The former director of women’s basketball operations at Temple University claimed Cosby guided her to a couch, where she passed out.

Constand testified she was “jolted” awake to find Cosby touching her breasts, digitally penetratin­g her and forcing her to touch his penis, all without her consent.

Constand didn’t report the incident to police until January 2005, about a year after it occurred. Constand was 30 and Cosby was in his 60s at the time of the assault.

Cosby, who did not testify during his first trial or at the retrial, maintained the contact he had with Constand was consensual.

During the retrial, Mesereau, who successful­ly represente­d singer Michael Jackson on molestatio­n charges in 2004, portrayed Constand as greedy and “a pathologic­al liar” who had a financial motive to lie about a sexual assault.

For the first time publicly, it was revealed during the trial that Cosby entered into a $3,380,000 civil settlement with Constand in October 2006. Judge O’Neill ruled that evidence of the civil settlement between Cosby and Constand was admissible evidence at the criminal trial.

Evidence of the civil settlement was not part of Cosby’s first trial in June 2017.

The defense team’s star witness was Marguerite “Margo” Jackson, a onetime Temple University colleague of Constand, who testified that she had a discussion during which Constand told her she could fabricate a claim of sexual assault against a high-profile person to “get money.”

But prosecutor­s attacked Jackson’s credibilit­y, implying two statements Jackson made about the alleged conversati­on with Constand were inconsiste­nt and that her testimony could not be trusted.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bill Cosby arrives during jury deliberati­ons in his sexual assault retrial, Thursday at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Bill Cosby arrives during jury deliberati­ons in his sexual assault retrial, Thursday at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa.

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