Los Angeles Times

Cosby trial focuses on pills he gave accuser

Prosecutor­s question if they were Benadryl or Quaaludes — and if it even it matters.

- By Steven Zeitchik steve.zeitchik@latimes.com

NORRISTOWN, Pa. — Bill Cosby said he gave Benadryl to Andrea Constand on the night in 2004 when she claims he assaulted her. But there’s reason to think the substance could have been far more potent, prosecutor­s at his sexual assault trial suggested Friday.

The suppositio­n was part of a day of testimony in which the one-and-a-half pills the entertaine­r gave the former Temple University basketball staffer were intensely scrutinize­d.

The district attorney in Montgomery County, where Cosby is charged with three counts of aggravated indecent assault, revealed pieces of the 2005 civil deposition in which Cosby was asked why he concealed the pills’ identity in a phone conversati­on later with Constand and her mother, Gianna.

“Why didn’t you just say it was Benadryl?” a questioner in the deposition asked Cosby regarding the pills he gave Constand before she claims he assaulted her in January 2004.

The performer answered that it was self-protection, not deceit — he worried how Gianna Constand might use the informatio­n against him if he admitted it or sent the pills to her home in Ontario, as she had requested.

“I’m first thinking the mother is coming at me for being a dirty old man, which is bad,” he said in the deposition regarding his conversati­on with the Constands. “But also: ‘What did you give my daughter?’ I put these things in the mail [to] Canada, what are they going to say if they receive it? What are they going to do if I tell them?”

He said in the deposition that he gave Andrea Constand the Benadryl from his own reserve because she had complained about stress and neck pain, and he wanted to help her relax.

Constand said the pills Cosby gave her were blue, yet when he voluntaril­y turned over Benadryl pills to police in January 2005 to demonstrat­e he kept a cache at hand, they were pink. James Reape, a Montgomery County police officer who investigat­ed the case, said on the stand he “found that to be odd.”

Prosecutor­s later in the day also read parts of the deposition in which Cosby acknowledg­ed that decades ago he would buy Quaaludes to give to women before having sex with them.

“I used them the same as a person would, say, have a drink,” he said in the deposition.

When asked whether he would “use them for young women you wanted to have sex with,” he answered, “Yes,” but said he never gave the drugs to a woman without her knowledge.

The Quaalude testimony is central to the prosecutio­n’s effort to shape the jury’s impression of Cosby as someone who dispenses drugs to enable sexual encounters. The defense had opposed the admission of the deposition in part because of that testimony, saying it wasn’t relevant to the Constand incident.

Prosecutor­s on Friday also called a forensic toxicology expert, Timothy Rohrig, to testify that Constand’s symptoms could be linked to a number of drugs, including both Quaaludes and Benadryl.

Rohrig said that even if the pills were Benadryl, one or one-and-a-half tablets would have a very sleep-inducing effect.

“Most people think of it as an antihistam­ine … but one of the actions is it can cause significan­t sedation,” he said. He was asked whether the pills would be powerful enough for a specific criminal purpose.

“It has been used in a drug to facilitate sexual assault,” Rohrig said, citing such cases.

The prosecutio­n rested after Rohrig testified. The defense is likely to call several experts when the case resumes Monday. It remains uncertain whether Cosby might testify.

 ?? Matt Rourke Associated Press ?? PROSECUTOR­S rested their case Friday against Bill Cosby, who is accused of sexual assault in 2004.
Matt Rourke Associated Press PROSECUTOR­S rested their case Friday against Bill Cosby, who is accused of sexual assault in 2004.

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