Waikato Times

Prosecutor­s in Cosby retrial want up to 19 women to testify

- -AP

UNITED STATES: Prosecutor­s in Bill Cosby’s retrial want to call as many as 19 other women to the witness stand to show he had a five-decade pattern of drugging and harming women.

Cosby is due in court for a pretrial hearing today, less than two weeks after his daughter’s death, as his lawyers clash with prosecutor­s over how many of his accusers are allowed to testify at his April 2 sexual assault trial.

Judge Steven O’Neill allowed just one other accuser to take the witness stand at Cosby’s first trial, which ended in a hung jury last year. Prosecutor­s had proposed calling as many as 13. They added six more to the list for the retrial, including model Janice Dickinson.

Cosby’s lawyers have said they would seek to delay the retrial if other accusers are given a chance to testify. They said they would need extra time to look into the allegation­s.

Jury selection is slated to begin March 29.

Cosby’s lawyers wrote in a court filing that some of the other accusers’ allegation­s date to the 1960s and are ‘‘virtually impossible to defend against.’'

‘‘Developing a defence to any of these outdated claims will require unusual amounts of investigat­ive effort that cannot be completed by the present trial date,’' the lawyers wrote.

Cosby’s 44-year-old daughter, Ensa, died of kidney disease February 23. His lawyers have given no indication they would seek to delay to day’s hearing.

In January, the 80-year-old entertaine­r was suddenly out and about in his hometown of Philadelph­ia in what legal experts said was an effort to rebuild his good-guy image. Over a two-week span, Cosby emerged from a long period of near-seclusion to have dinner with friends at a restaurant and to give his first comedy performanc­e in more than two years.

Prosecutor­s are counting on other accusers testifying to show a sinister side to Cosby’s public persona as ‘‘America’s Dad,’' cultivated through his role as an affable Jell-O pitchman and family sitcom star. Cosby has pleaded not guilty to charges he drugged and molested former Temple University women’s basketball official Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelph­ia home. He remains free on bail.

Prosecutor­s led off Cosby’s first trial with testimony from the one other accuser they were allowed to call, Kelly Johnson, who worked for Cosby’s agent.

She testified that Cosby knocked her out with a pill during a 1996 meeting at the Bel-Air Hotel. She said she woke up to find her dress dishevelle­d, her breasts exposed and Cosby forcing her to touch his genitals.

Cosby’s lawyers argue that the other accusers’ largely unsubstant­iated accusation­s aren’t enough to meet the strict legal standard for letting prosecutor­s present evidence of a defendant’s prior bad conduct.

They argued that allowing the women to take the witness stand would force the jury to make separate determinat­ions about whether Cosby harmed them, devolving his retrial into a series of mini-trials.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand, Johnson and Dickinson have done.

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Bill Cosby

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