Bill Cosby finally Charged!
After been chareged, Bill
Cosby's attorneys surrounded by reporters said: "We intend to mount a vigorous defense"
Mr Cosby for the
first time is charged criminally with sexual assaul, and the charges
relate to accusations from former Temple University employee Andrea Constand. Hours after
he set foot in a Pennsylvania courtroom to face sexual assault charges, Bill
Cosby's attorneys called the criminal case against him "unjustified"
and vowed to fight it.
"The charge
by the Montgomery County District Attorney's office came as no surprise, filed
12 years after the alleged incident and coming on the heels of a hotly
contested election for this county's DA during which this case was made the
focal point," Cosby's attorneys said in a statement released after his
arraignment Wednesday.
"Make no mistake, we intend to mount a vigorous
defense against this unjustified charge and we expect that Mr. Cosby will be
exonerated by a court of law."
Cosby, whose
legacy as a comedian has been tarnished by multiple accusations of sexual
assault, faces three felony charges of aggravated indecent assault in the case,
which is tied to a 2004 accusation in Montgomery County.
He looked down
and was guided as he walked into a small courtroom. The judge set his bail at
$1 million and ordered him to surrender his passport. Cosby did not enter a
plea.
Following the
brief arraignment, Cosby went to the police station in Cheltenham Township,
where he was booked per protocol. Cosby posted bail and left the police
station.
The Montgomery
County District Attorney's Office released a booking photo of Bill Cosby after
Wednesday's proceedings. These are the
first criminal charges levied against Cosby since the allegations first arose.
Cosby has steadfastly denied any wrongdoing.
After looking at
all the evidence in the 2004 allegations, prosecutors decided to charge Cosby
"because it was the right thing to do," Montgomery County prosecutor
Kevin Steele said.
The district
attorney, who was elected to his post last month, did not name the victim, but
the accusations he announced parallel the allegations made by former Temple
University employee Andrea Constand. She has said Cosby drugged and fondled her
in January 2004.
The criminal
complaint and Constand's attorney, Dolores Troiani, confirmed that the criminal
charges relate to Constand's case.
She was the
first person to publicly allege sexual assault by Cosby.
New evidence
The criminal investigation
into Cosby in Montgomery County was reopened in July after new evidence came to
light, Steele said.
The evidence was
court documents related to a civil suit that Constand filed against Cosby after
prosecutors declined to seek charges against the comedian, citing insufficient
evidence. Constand settled the civil case against Cosby in 2006.
This past July
-- nine years after the civil case was settled -- a judge decided to unseal
Cosby's deposition in that case in response to a motion by the media.
In it, Cosby
admits he had sexual relationships with at least five women outside his
marriage, gave prescription sedatives to women he wanted to have sex with and
tried to hide affairs from his wife.
When the
deposition was released and "we learned about allegations from other
victims under similar circumstances, reopening this case was not a
question," Steele said. "Rather, reopening this case was our duty as
law enforcement officers with a sworn obligation to uphold our constitutions
and to uphold the law." Prosecutors reexamined the original investigation
in light of the new documents, reinterviewed some witnesses and decided to
pursue the criminal charge.
"The
evidence shows Mr. Cosby established a relationship with the victim after
meeting her through her work associated with Temple University's women's
basketball program," Steele said.
Constand
considered Cosby a friend and mentor, but on two occasions rejected advances by
Cosby, he said. "On the evening in question, Mr. Cosby urged her to take
pills that he provided to her, and to drink wine, the effect of which rendered
her unable to move or respond to his advances, and he committed aggravated
indecent assault upon her," Steele said.
Pennsylvania law
has a 12-year statute of limitations for sexual assault cases, a window that
closes early next year.
Some unsealed
documents from the civil suit revealed that Cosby has admitted to getting
prescription Quaaludes to give to women he wanted to have sex with.
Asked whether
investigators believe Cosby used Quaaludes in the 2004 case for which he is
being charged, Steele said that pills were provided.
"There's
inconsistencies on [what pills they were]. There was also wine provided,"
the prosecutor said. He said the woman has said she was "frozen,
paralyzed, unable to move," so she was therefore unable to consent to
sexual activity.
Allegations gain
momentum
The 78-year-old
Cosby has been dogged by allegations of sexual assault. At least 50 women have
come forward to publicly accuse him of assaulting them over four decades, most
saying he drugged them first.
Formal
accusations date back at least 10 years, when Constand went to police with her
complaint.
Cosby's
reputation as a comic, beloved TV dad, philanthropist and education advocate
appeared unaffected by the allegations before public sentiment took a turn in
late 2014.
Comedian
Hannibal Buress has been credited as the one who spotlighted the accusations.
In October 2014, a video of a standup routine in which he called Cosby a
"rapist" went viral, and soon after, women started coming forward
with claims that they were drugged and assaulted by the TV legend.
In interviews,
Buress said his intention was not to "out" Cosby, but to make a joke
about Cosby's alleged hypocrisy. Cosby created a moral image for himself as a
crusader for high moral standards, Buress said in his routine, while facing
accusations of rape.
Source:CNN
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