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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Steven Zeitchik

Cosby loses bid to get case dismissed

NORRISTOWN, Pa. _ In a rebuff to Bill Cosby, a judge has ruled that the entertainer's accuser won't have to take the stand before Cosby's trial on sexual assault charges begins.

The Pennsylvania judge, Steven T. O'Neill, said Thursday that he was adhering to a legal precedent that accusers are not required to testify at pretrial hearings.

The ruling streamlines the process by which Cosby's case will reach a trial and limits the opportunity for the defense to garner information from _ or exert influence over _ a key prosecution witness before the trial.

Cosby has been charged in Montgomery County with three felony counts of aggravated indecent assault as a result of a 2004 incident at his home here. The prosecution contends that the entertainer assaulted Andrea Constand, a former Temple University basketball team employee, while supplying her with wine and a pill.

The case is the first instance in which Cosby has faced criminal charges after dozens of women stepped forward in the last two years to accuse him of sexual assault.

The Los Angeles Times does not generally identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted, unless they voluntarily reveal their identities, as Constand has done.

The prosecution had kept Constand off the witness stand during a hearing in May, instead relying on prior statements for its case.

That hearing saw Cosby ordered to stand trial. His lawyers on Thursday essentially were appealing that ruling. They sought to reopen the preliminary hearing and compel Constand to testify _ or to have the charges dismissed entirely.

At issue was a Pennsylvania rule of criminal procedure enacted in 2013 that established that pretrial proceedings are exempt from the Sixth Amendment requirement that a defendant be able to confront his or her accuser. That rule was challenged in a 2014 case involving David Ricker, a Pennsylvania man accused of aggravated assault and attempted murder of a state trooper, with the judge affirming the exception.

Constand is expected to take the stand when Cosby's trial begins, setting up the first public showdown between the actor and an accuser.

Prosecutors wanted to keep Constand off the witness stand in the pretrial phase so as not to expose her testimony to the defense.

"It's our position we're not going to retraumatize victims," District Attorney Kevin Steele said. "If they want to confront the witness, they can confront her at trial."

The defense team, led in court Thursday by Los Angeles attorney Christopher Tayback, argued that the 2013 rule did not comprehensively exempt an accuser from testifying before a trial and that Cosby's due process rights were violated without such testimony.

"Cross-examination has been tried and tested and proven to be probably the best device for determining the merits in a dispute," Tayback said. "That's really all we've been asking for."

Though he dubbed it "a very difficult call," O'Neill often seemed skeptical of the defense's claims. "I guess I'm trying to understand your perspective on how due process was violated," he said to Tayback at one point.

Cosby, who turns 79 next week, appeared frail as he walked through the courtroom, holding an aide's arm and carrying a wooden cane.

Many of his accusers see the Constand case as a rare opportunity for justice because the statute of limitations in many of the other incidents have run out.

The proceedings Thursday also involved deposition testimony from a 2005 civil suit that the prosecution used to help make its preliminary-hearing case _ and which the defense said it will try to suppress at trial.

The details, some of them graphic, help address the key question of whether Constand was sufficiently aware of her circumstances to provide consent.

O'Neill has been chosen to preside over the trial. But other motions could delay that process.

After the ruling, Cosby's lead counsel, Brian McMonagle, told reporters that he planned to appeal the decision to Pennsylvania's highest court.

Steele said defense attorneys already had delayed the trial for too long: "They're saying they want to confront the witness. Let's go to trial and confront the witness."

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