The Morning Call

Why Bill Cosby’s sexual assault conviction was overturned

- By Maryclaire Dale and Alanna Durkin Richer Associated Press reporter Michael Tarm contribute­d to this report from Chicago.

Bill Cosby’s sexual assault conviction was thrown out Wednesday by Pennsylvan­ia’s highest court in a ruling that swiftly freed the actor from prison more than three years after he was found guilty of drugging and molesting Temple University employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelph­ia mansion.

Cosby, 83, was the first celebrity tried and convicted in the #MeToo era, and his conviction was seen as a turning point in the movement to hold powerful men accountabl­e for sexual misconduct.

Here’s a look at the case against Cosby and the court’s decision:

Why did the court toss his conviction?

The split court found that Cosby was unfairly prosecuted because the previous district attorney had promised the comedian once known as “America’s Dad” that he wouldn’t be charged over Constand’s accusation­s. Cosby was charged by another prosecutor who claimed he wasn’t bound by that agreement.

The court said that’s not the case. The justices found that Cosby relied on that promise when he agreed to testify without invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion in a lawsuit brought against him by Constand.

The court concluded that prosecutor who later brought the charges was obligated to stick to the nonprosecu­tion agreement, so the conviction cannot stand. The justices wrote that “denying the defendant the benefit of that decision is an affront to fundamenta­l fairness, particular­ly when it results in a criminal prosecutio­n that was foregone for more than a decade.”

What’s the deal with the nonprosecu­tion agreement?

The promise not to prosecute Cosby was made in 2005 by Bruce Castor, who was then the top prosecutor for Montgomery County. Castor was also on the legal team that defended former President Donald Trump during his historic second impeachmen­t trial over the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol by his supporters.

During a court hearing weeks after Cosby’s 2015 arrest, Castor testified that he promised Cosby he wouldn’t be prosecuted

in the hopes that it would persuade the actor to testify in a civil case brought by Constand and allow her to win damages. Castor acknowledg­ed the only place the matter was put in writing was in the 2005 press release announcing his decision not to prosecute, but said his decision was meant to shield Cosby from prosecutio­n “for all time.”

His successor noted, during the appeal arguments, that Castor went on to say in the press release that he could revisit the decision in the future.

Castor had said that Constand’s case would be difficult to prove in court because she waited a year to come forward and stayed in contact with Cosby.

The first jurors who heard the case may have agreed with him, as they could not reach a verdict in 2017. But a second jury empaneled after the #MeToo movement exploded found him guilty at his 2018 retrial. Constand settled her civil case against Cosby for more than $3 million.

Castor’s successor, District Attorney Kevin Steele, charged Cosby in 2015 after a federal judge, acting on a request from Associated Press, unsealed documents from her 2005 lawsuit against Cosby, revealing his damaging testimony about sexual encounters with Constand and others. Castor has said Cosby “would’ve had to have been nuts to say those things if there was any chance he could’ve been prosecuted.”

How rare is this?

Extremely rare.

Wesley Oliver, a Pennsylvan­ia law professor who has followed Cosby’s case closely over the years, said he has never heard of a high court in Pennsylvan­ia or anywhere else grappling with

a prosecutor’s informal promise not to prosecute.

“It breaks new ground entirely,” said Oliver, who teaches at Duquesne University School of Law in Pittsburgh. “It sets precedent not just for Pennsylvan­ia but probably other states.”

He said the ruling should drive home to prosecutor­s the risks of suggesting at news conference­s, in press releases or verbally in private that they will not prosecute.

“They should at least add three words — ‘at this time,’ ” he said. “If you add that qualifier, which wasn’t done in Cosby’s case, you should be good to go,” Oliver said.

Can Cosby be tried again?

It’s highly unlikely. The decision on Wednesday bars Cosby from being tried again over Constand’s complaint, finding it to be the “only remedy that comports with society’s reasonable expectatio­ns of its elected prosecutor­s and our criminal justice system.”

And the accusation­s raised by dozens of other women, including the five who testified at his 2018 trial, often go back decades and are most likely too remote to prosecute.

Cosby turns 84 next month. However, his lawyer said he remains in good health, except for vision problems that render him legally blind.

The trial judge deemed him a sexually violent predator who could still pose a danger to women given his wealth, power and fame, and ordered that he be on a lifetime sex offender registry and check in monthly with authoritie­s. However, the decision negates that finding.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Comedian Bill Cosby, center, and spokespers­on Andrew Wyatt, right, approach members of the media gathered outside Cosby’s home in Elkins Parkon Wednesday after Pennsylvan­ia’s highest court overturned his sex assault conviction.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Comedian Bill Cosby, center, and spokespers­on Andrew Wyatt, right, approach members of the media gathered outside Cosby’s home in Elkins Parkon Wednesday after Pennsylvan­ia’s highest court overturned his sex assault conviction.

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