Texarkana Gazette

Three accusers confront Bill Cosby,

- By Michael R. Sisak

NORRISTOWN, Pa.—Decades after they say Bill Cosby knocked them out with intoxicant­s and sexually assaulted them, three of his accusers confronted the 80-yearold comedian in court Wednesday, with one woman pointedly calling him a "serial rapist" and another asking him through her tears, "You remember, don't you, Mr. Cosby?"

The women's charged rhetoric prompted several mistrial requests from Cosby's lawyers— were denied—as prosecutor­s built their case that Cosby was one of Hollywood's biggest predators long before he met Andrea Constand, the chief accuser in his sexual assault retrial.

Now well into middle age, the accusers spoke of entering Cosby's orbit as starstruck young women seeking career help or, in the case of a casino bartender from Reno, Nevada, simply looking for a fun time. All of them testified they wound up unconsciou­s from the pills or alcohol he gave them, unable to say no or resist as he had his way with them.

"I was raped," declared the former bartender, Janice Baker-Kinney, who was 24 when she says Cosby gave her pills she suspected to be quaaludes and had sex with her in 1982.

Cosby's lawyers say Baker-Kinney, who now works as a stage manager on pro sports broadcasts in the San Francisco area, took the drug willingly.

Another accuser, sobbing uncontroll­ably as she testified, told jurors she got to know Cosby through a family connection as a 17-yearold aspiring model and actress. Chelan Lasha said Cosby gave her a little blue pill he described as an antihistam­ine to help her get over a cold, along with two shots of amaretto "to help break up the cough." The combinatio­n immobilize­d her and rendered her unable to speak.

Cosby then assaulted her, touching her breast and rubbing himself against her leg, Lasha said.

"I could barely move. He guided me there, and he laid me in the bed. I couldn't move any more after that. He laid next to me, and he kept touching my breast and humping my leg. I remember something warm hitting my leg," she said.

Asked what was going through her mind, Lasha testified: "Dr. Huxtable wouldn't do this. Why are you doing this to me? You're supposed to help me be successful."

Turning to Cosby, she made the remark that suggested he remembered the encounter.

Cosby, who portrayed kindly Dr. Cliff Huxtable on his hit TV comedy "The Cosby Show," turned away and smiled slightly.

Lasha, Baker-Kinney and a third woman who also testified, Heidi Thomas, are among five additional accusers whom prosecutor­s plan to call to make the case that Cosby, once revered as "America's Dad," was a Hollywood predator who is only now facing a reckoning after allegedly assaulting Constand at his suburban Philadelph­ia home in 2004.

The additional accusers could also help prosecutor­s insulate Constand from the defense's contention that she is a "con artist" who preyed on Cosby's vulnerabil­ity after the 1997 killing of his son, Ennis, and then framed him to score a big payday via a $3.4 million civil settlement.

The defense has urged jurors to ignore the other accusers, calling their allegation­s irrelevant to the charges involving Constand, who turned 45 on Wednesday.

Outside court, Cosby spokeswoma­n Ebonee Benson called the testimony from prior accusers a "prosecutio­n by distractio­n."

"When you don't have a case, you'll fill the case with something else," she said. "Once the jury hears the evidence of the case we are here for, they will render a verdict of not guilty."

Constand, a former Temple University women's basketball administra­tor, alleges Cosby gave her pills and then molested her. He says the encounter was consensual.

His first trial last year ended in a hung jury.

Under questionin­g by prosecutor­s Wednesday, Baker-Kinney said she has long blamed herself for taking the pills that Cosby gave her.

"It pisses me off that that's something I'm carrying forever," she said. "I don't want to have that guilt and shame. I don't want to think that something that happened to me is my fault. I push it away. I don't think about it. But it's going to be with me forever."

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