Key pretrial hearing in Cosby criminal case set for November
PHILADELPHIA — A crucial pretrial hearing set for next month in Bill Cosby’s criminal sex-assault case will determine whether jurors hear from 13 other accusers and see the damaging testimony he gave in a 2005 civil case.
Prosecutors in suburban Philadelphia hope to call the other women to try to show that the actor-comedian has been drugging and molesting women since the 1960s. Defence lawyers have promised a showdown over their testimony, arguing that the blind, 79-year-old Cosby can no longer even recognize the women, least yet recall details of any encounters.
“Because of the commonwealth’s delay, Mr. Cosby can no longer defend himself,” defence lawyers Brian McMonagle and Angela Agrusa wrote last week in a motion to dismiss the charges. “Compounding the problem are the vague allegations of many of the accusers about the time and place of the alleged incidents.”
The criminal case involves only a single 2004 encounter with Andrea Constand, who met Cosby at Temple University in Philadelphia, where he was a famous booster and trustee and she managed the women’s basketball team. Her lawyer said she was dating a woman at the time and went to Cosby’s home for advice about a career change.


