The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Bill Cosby case ends in mistrial

D.A. will try again in 2018 to convict entertaine­r of sex assault

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

NORRISTOWN » Comedian and actor Bill Cosby began 2017 awaiting trial for the alleged 2004 sexual assault of a woman at his Cheltenham mansion but the dramatic trial that played out in June and captured worldwide attention didn’t provide a resolution to those charges.

A mistrial was declared June 17 by Montgomery County Judge Steven T. O’Neill after a jury of seven men and five women selected from Allegheny County individual­ly told the judge they were hopelessly deadlocked “on all counts” after deliberati­ng more than 52 hours over six days. The deliberati­ons took longer than the evidentiar­y portion of the trial.

District Attorney Kevin R. Steele immediatel­y vowed to seek a retrial. O’Neill reminded Cosby, now 80, that the three counts of aggravated indecent assault lodged against him remain intact and that he will remain free on 10 percent of $1

million bail, pending the retrial.

That retrial is now set to begin with jury selection on April 2, 2018.

This time around Cosby has a new legal team, Tom Mesereau, Kathleen Bliss and Samuel W. Silver, who reportedly have spent the last several months reviewing the voluminous court records and transcript­s associated with Cosby’s first trial. The new defense team made its first appearance in court in July.

Mesereau, of Los Angeles, who is well known for successful­ly representi­ng singer Michael Jackson on molestatio­n charges in 2004, told the judge the new defense team will not seek a change of venue or a jury from another county. Cosby’s jury will be comprised of Montgomery County residents.

During Cosby’s first trial, a jury from Allegheny County was selected after Cosby’s previous defense team argued pretrial publicity prevented Cosby from obtaining a fair and impartial jury in Montgomery County.

Mesereau, Bliss and Silver replace lawyers Brian J. McMonagle and Angela Agrusa, who represente­d Cosby at the June trial.

Mesereau, Bliss and Silver have not revealed if Cosby will testify at the retrial. Cosby did not testify during the first trial.

Steele, who is assisted by prosecutor­s M. Stewart Ryan and Kristen Feden, previously said prosecutor­s are “confident in our case and the evidence” and that the case “deserves a verdict and we intend to get there.”

William Henry Cosby Jr., as his name appears on charging documents, faces three counts of aggravated indecent assault in connection with allegation­s he had inappropri­ate sexual contact with Andrea Constand, a former Temple University athletic department employee, at his Cheltenham home after plying her with blue pills and wine sometime between mid-January and mid-February 2004. Cosby maintains his contact with Constand was consensual.

Cosby faces a possible maximum sentence of 15 to 30 years in prison if convicted of the charges.

According to the Mesereau Law Group’s web site, it “is dedicated to serving its very select clientele.” Mesereau is best known for representi­ng the late Michael Jackson at a 2004 California trial at which Jackson was acquitted of all child molestatio­n charges. Mesereau’s other celebrity clients have included actor Robert Blake and boxer Mike Tyson, according to Mesereau’s web site.

Silver, a partner with the Schnader Harrison Segal and Lewis firm in Philadelph­ia, previously represente­d U.S. Rep. Chaka Fattah who was convicted of federal corruption charges in June 2016 and is serving a 10-year prison term. Silver, an adjunct faculty member of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, also represente­d former Penn State President Graham Spanier at his child endangerme­nt trial earlier this year.

Bliss, according to her biography, is a former federal prosecutor turned defense lawyer who has tried more than 50 federal criminal jury trials during her career.

Cosby’s new defense team has not provided any hints at potential trial strategies.

During Cosby’s June trial, McMonagle and Agrusa argued Cosby was the victim of false accusation­s and that the entertaine­r and Constand had a “romantic relationsh­ip” and consensual sexual contact during the 2004 incident. At one point during the trial, McMonagle stood beside Cosby and suggested to jurors that while Cosby may have been an unfaithful husband, that didn’t make him a criminal.

Prosecutor­s argued Cosby was a trusted friend and mentor who took advantage of a woman in a “vulnerable state,” and sexually assaulted Constand.

Constand, 44, of Ontario, Canada, testified over two days that after taking the blue pills she began slurring her words and became “frozen” or paralyzed and was unable to fight off Cosby’s sexual advances. Constand claimed Cosby placed her on a couch, touched her breasts, forced her to touch his penis and performed digital penetratio­n all without her consent.

The 11-day trial came at a high cost for the county. When county officials completed their calculatio­n of the Cosby trial expenses, they indicated the cost of the trial reached $219,100. The trial that began June 5 was the highest-profile case to ever play out in a county courtroom.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Bill Cosby arrives at the Montgomery County Courthouse during his sexual assault trial, Friday, June 16, 2017, in Norristown. Montgomery County spent $219,000 on Cosby’s 2017 trial.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Bill Cosby arrives at the Montgomery County Courthouse during his sexual assault trial, Friday, June 16, 2017, in Norristown. Montgomery County spent $219,000 on Cosby’s 2017 trial.
 ?? DIGIAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO ?? In this Aug. 22, 2017 file photo Bill Cosby departs Montgomery County Courthouse after a hearing in his sexual assault case in Norristown.
DIGIAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO In this Aug. 22, 2017 file photo Bill Cosby departs Montgomery County Courthouse after a hearing in his sexual assault case in Norristown.
 ??  ?? Kevin Steele
Kevin Steele
 ??  ?? Andrea Constand
Andrea Constand
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