Los Angeles Times

Cosby’s attorney comes out slinging

He tells jurors the woman accusing the comedian of sexual assault is a ‘con artist.’

- By Laura King laura.king@latimes.com

NORRISTOWN, Pa. — Bill Cosby’s lead attorney launched a blistering attack Tuesday on the character and credibilit­y of the former Temple University basketball staffer who has accused the comedian of drugging and sexually assaulting her, calling Andrea Constand a “con artist” who “hit the jackpot” with an earlier $3.8million civil settlement against him.

“Watch who this person Constand really is,” Tom Mesereau, the high-powered Los Angeles attorney who heads Cosby’s legal team, told the jury in his no-holdsbarre­d opening statement at Cosby’s retrial in suburban Philadelph­ia.

He painted the 44-yearold accuser as an opportunis­tic schemer who had calculated­ly pursued Cosby, now 80, as a financial target, concocting a “so-called drugging and assault that never happened.”

“A con artist, ladies and gentlemen of the jury,” Mesereau said, repeating: “A con artist.”

It was a risky courtroom gambit — especially coming just hours before a Colorado music teacher testified about an eerily similar assault by the comedian in 1984, when he was a charismati­c star and she was an aspiring musical-theater actress.

The retrial that got underway on Monday centers on an encounter 14 years ago between Cosby and Constand, which the defense claims was consensual sexual activity between the two.

Constand says the comedian manipulate­d her into taking pills that incapacita­ted her, then groped her breasts and penetrated her digitally.

Cosby was 66 at the time; she was 30.

The combative rhetoric employed by Mesereau seemed to fly in the face of national sentiment surroundin­g the #MeToo movement, which has seen the toppling of powerful and prominent men over accusation­s of sexual misconduct and triggered ongoing debate about holding those in authority accountabl­e for their sexual misconduct, particular­ly in the workplace.

The legal drama unfolding in the Montgomery County Courthouse is the highest-profile celebrity trial since the movement ignited last fall when a parade of well-known actresses and others came forward with stories of predatory behavior by movie mogul Harvey Weinstein.

Mesereau seemingly sought to turn that believethe-accuser zeitgeist on its head, suggesting that “the current climate in America” — an apparent reference to the #MeToo movement — could make it harder for the comedian to get a fair hearing. And he scoffed at the notion that Constand had come forward out of principle.

“The only principle was money,” he said. “Money, money, money.”

The harsh tone of Mesereau’s statement signaled a likely effort to attack the credibilit­y not only of Constand, but of other women who have come forward to accuse Cosby of a similar pattern of predatory behavior.

The defense attorney derided in advance the expected accounts of assaults like the one Constand described as “prosecutio­n by distractio­n.”

In Cosby’s first trial, which ended last June with a deadlocked jury, only one other woman besides Constand was permitted to testify about Cosby’s alleged misconduct. This time, up to five others are expected to take the stand, out of 19 women whose testimony the prosecutio­n sought to introduce.

They in turn are among dozens of women who have come forward and alleged drugging and groping by Cosby, but many of the alleged incidents date back decades and the statute of limitation­s has expired.

The first of those women took the stand Tuesday, offering a composed but gripping account of an encounter with the entertaine­r after he offered to mentor her.

Heidi Thomas, a longmarrie­d mother of three from Castle Rock, Colo., said she was introduced to Cosby by her agent in 1984, when she was in her early 20s and working as an actress at a dinner-theater playhouse in Denver.

Her agent said Cosby had offered to help out a promising young performing talent.

She testified that she was thrilled that a famous comic with Hollywood clout — a “giant in the industry,” she called him — was taking a profession­al interest in her.

Thomas described herself as unsophisti­cated. “I was kind of ‘Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm,’ ” she said, referring to the wholesome heroine of the popular series of children’s books.

After Cosby called her at home and spoke to her parents, she accepted an agency-paid trip to Reno for what was to be an actingcoac­hing session with the comic, who was performing at a casino there. She was booked at a hotel, but a driver met her at the airport and drove her to a ranch house outside Reno, telling her that Cosby liked to spend time there untroubled by paparazzi.

She testified that she found herself alone with him in the house, which surprised her. Cosby asked her to do a “cold read” of a scene in which she played a character who was intoxicate­d, and he seemed disappoint­ed with her performanc­e. He produced a glass of white wine and told her to sip it as a “prop,” which she said she did.

What she recalled next was disjointed and fragmentar­y, she said, likening the sensation to viewing a series of snapshots.

“I remember waking on a bed. I had clothes on, he did not. I was lying down and he was forcing himself in my mouth,” she said. “I remember thinking — I felt sick, and ‘How did I get here?’”

She said she recalled nothing about her trip home, but was convinced that she must have somehow blundering­ly given Cosby the impression that she was willing to engage in sex acts.

“I must have said something that was misunderst­ood, and I really wanted to fix it,” she said she remembered thinking.

Her story was a jarring contrast to the morning’s opening statement by Mesereau, a flamboyant figure with flowing white hair, who began by previewing the expected testimony of Marguerite Jackson, who years ago was a sometime roommate of Constand on the road with the Temple basketball team.

Jackson, he said, would detail a damning conversati­on in which Constand mused about falsely accusing a powerful man of sexual assault in order to seek a big payout.

“‘Were you really assaulted?’ ” Mesereau said Jackson asked her then. “‘No, but I can say I was, and set up a celebrity and get a lot of money for my education and my business,’ ” Jackson said Constand replied, according to the defense.

Mesereau, who is best known for representi­ng singer Michael Jackson on child molestatio­n charges, sought to portray Cosby as a sympatheti­c character for whom the trial and retrial represente­d a punishing ordeal.

“It’s brutal for him,” he said. “He’s 80 years old and legally blind.” Nonetheles­s, he said, Cosby welcomed a chance to vindicate himself.

In his statement, Mesereau also set forth a broader indictment of the entertainm­ent world in which a young Cosby rose from humble beginnings to become a talented and trailblazi­ng performer.

“Hollywood is a treacherou­s place,” he said. “If you’re a young star, everyone wants a piece of the action.”

 ?? David Maialetti Getty Images ?? TOM MESEREAU, Bill Cosby’s attorney, used rhetoric in his opening statement that seemed to f ly in the face of sentiment surroundin­g the #MeToo movement.
David Maialetti Getty Images TOM MESEREAU, Bill Cosby’s attorney, used rhetoric in his opening statement that seemed to f ly in the face of sentiment surroundin­g the #MeToo movement.

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