San Francisco Chronicle

Many in jury pool say they’ve made minds up already

- By Graham Bowley Graham Bowley is a New York Times writer.

PITTSBURGH — The difficulty of finding 12 impartial jurors to weigh sexual-assault charges against Bill Cosby was on full display as jury selection began on Monday, when most of the potential jurors admitted to being aware of the blaze of publicity surroundin­g that entertaine­r in recent years, amid allegation­s by dozens of women.

When asked by Judge Steven O’Neill if they had already formed an opinion about Cosby’s guilt or innocence, 34 of the first 100 potential jurors questioned raised the numbered cards used to identify them. When the judge asked if they had “heard, read or seen anything” about the case, more than 80 of the cards shot up.

In addition, 67 jurors said it would impose a personal hardship on them to serve on the panel, sequestere­d, for a trial expected to last two weeks in June.

Nearly 17 months after Cosby was charged with the aggravated indecent assault of Andrea Constand at his home in suburban Philadelph­ia in 2004, O’Neill and the lawyers in the case began the arduous process of choosing among potential jurors, drawn from lists of registered voters and drivers in Allegheny County.

By midafterno­on, three jurors had been selected: two men and one woman. The defense had struck four using its peremptory challenges.

Cosby, 79, arrived at the Allegheny County Courthouse in Pittsburgh before 8 a.m., wearing a tan jacket, holding a cane and helped by an aide. He walked slowly through a courtyard in the middle of the building and declined to answer reporters’ questions.

The jury pool is being drawn in Allegheny County because of concerns raised by Cosby’s defense team that it would be hard to find openminded jurors in Montgomery County — near Philadelph­ia — where Cosby has a home and where the trial is scheduled to start June 5 in Norristown.

Cosby’s lawyers had requested instead a larger and more diverse jury pool drawn from either Philadelph­ia or the Pittsburgh area.

In proceeding­s that could take several days, O’Neill and the lawyers will try to select the 12 jurors, plus six alternates, who not only have been unmoved by the pretrial publicity but also are available to be bused 300 miles east to Norristown, and sequestere­d for the duration of the trial.

Foreseeing the difficulti­es of overcoming those factors, the court sent out a jury summons to a larger-thanusual pool: 2,934 people.

 ?? Nate Smallwood / Getty Images ?? Bill Cosby arrives at the courthouse in Allegheny County, Pa., for the first day of jury selection in his sexual-assault case. Three jurors had been chosen out of a pool of 2,934 people.
Nate Smallwood / Getty Images Bill Cosby arrives at the courthouse in Allegheny County, Pa., for the first day of jury selection in his sexual-assault case. Three jurors had been chosen out of a pool of 2,934 people.

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