Lodi News-Sentinel

Prosecutio­n rests its case in Cosby trial

- By Jeremy Roebuck and Michael Boren

PHILADELPH­IA — Prosecutor­s in Bill Cosby’s sex-assault trial closed their case Friday with one last punch: the 79-year-old entertaine­r’s own admission that in years past, he got powerful sedatives to give to women with whom he hoped to have sexual encounters.

In a 2005 deposition, Cosby admitted obtaining seven prescripti­ons for Quaaludes, a discoera party drug, from a Hollywood gynecologi­st in the ‘70s. But he insisted that he had never given anyone pills without their knowledge and consent.

“Quaaludes happen to be the drug that ... young people were using to party with, and I wanted to have them just in case,” Cosby said then.

The excerpts read to jurors Friday were part of a prosecutio­n bid to leave a lasting impression on the panel of seven men and five women as they absorbed a week’s worth of testimony and evidence. At its base, their task is to decide if they believe Andrea Constand’s accusation that the entertaine­r gave her pills one night in 2004 that left her essentiall­y powerless, then sexually assaulted her.

Cosby’s lawyers are set to begin presenting evidence Monday after a whirlwind government case highlighte­d by Constand’s first public statements about the alleged attack and Cosby’s own potentiall­y damaging words — picked from a deposition he gave for a lawsuit she filed against him in 2005.

The suit later settled for an undisclose­d sum and an agreement that barred both parties from discussing the incident. But the unsealing of that deposition by a federal judge in 2015 spurred Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin R. Steele to reopen the investigat­ion that year.

Because Cosby had said he did not intend to testify in his own defense, the deposition was poised to be the only chance for jurors to hear directly from the defendant. But Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt hinted Friday that his boss might be changing his mind.

“Nothing is ever off the table in a trial of this magnitude,” Wyatt told reporters during a break in the proceeding­s in Norristown.

As Cosby walked from the courtroom at the end of the day, a woman yelled: “Bill Cosby, I love you!” He raised his walking stick in acknowledg­ment.

As he had a day earlier, the entertaine­r had sat stone-faced as Montgomery County detective James Reape read back his own words to an eagerly listening jury.

One moment in that decade-old testimony elicited a chuckle from jurors and a rare courtroom smile from the defendant — a question and answer about the now-deceased doctor who wrote the Quaaludes prescripti­on, knowing full well Cosby didn’t intend to take the pills himself.

“Where does he practice?” Cosby had been asked, according to the transcript.

Cosby replied: “Dead.” The final government witness, toxicologi­st Timothy Rohrig, said the drowsiness and sedation Constand described in her testimony after accepting three blue pills from Cosby in 2004 could have been caused by a drug similar to Quaaludes — or by Benadryl, the over-the-counter allergy medicine Cosby has maintained he gave to Constand that night.

Either way, Constand claimed the pills left her powerless as Cosby molested her on the couch at his Cheltenham home.

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