Entertainment

Bill Cosby trial judge delivers 2 big victories to defence

The judge in Bill Cosby's sexual assault retrial gave his legal defence a huge boost Tuesday, ruling his lawyers can call a witness who says the accuser talked about framing a celebrity before she went to police in 2005 with allegations about the comedian.

#MeToo movement affecting jury selection

Bill Cosby arrives for jury selection in his sexual assault retrial in Norristown, Pa., on Tuesday. (Corey Perrine/Associated Press)

The judge in Bill Cosby's sexual assault retrial gave his legal defence a huge lift Tuesday with two key rulings that could help bolster the 80-year-old comedian's efforts to paint his accuser as a money-grubbing liar.

Judge Steven O'Neill said the defence can call a witness who says Cosby's accuser talked about framing a celebrity before she went to police in 2005 with allegations about Cosby. The judge also helped the defence case by ruling that jurors can hear how much Cosby paid the accuser, Andrea Constand, in a 2006 civil settlement.

The rulings came ahead of a productive second day of jury selection in suburban Philadelphia, with a half-dozen jurors picked by the midday lunch break to bring the total number to seven. Five of the jurors picked so far are white and two are black, with four men and three women.

O'Neill's ruling to allow Marguerite Jackson to take the witness stand was at odds with his decision to block her from testifying at the first trial, which ended in a hung jury.

At the time, the judge barred her from taking the stand after Constand denied knowing her. Since then, prosecutors have told Cosby's lawyers that Constand had modified her statement to admit she "recalls a Margo."

Andrea Constand is seen at the Montgomery County Courthouse during the first Cosby trial in June 2017. (Lucas Jackson/Associated Press)

O'Neill didn't explain the reasoning behind his change of heart Tuesday but issued one caveat to the ruling, saying he could revisit the issue of Jackson's testimony after Constand takes the stand.

Jackson's availability as a witness for Cosby could be crucial to a defence plan to attack Constand's credibility. Constand's lawyer has said Jackson isn't telling the truth.

Cosby is charged with drugging and sexually molesting Canadian Constand, a Temple University women's basketball administrator, at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. He says the encounter was consensual.

All of the jurors seated Tuesday said they had read media reports about Cosby's case but hadn't formed an opinion about his guilt or innocence and could serve as fair and impartial jurors.

Cosby's lawyers complained that prosecutors had improperly excluded two white men from serving on the jury on the basis of race and age, including one who said he thought many of the women coming forward in the #MeToo movement are "jumping on the bandwagon." But Cosby's lawyers themselves blocked several white women from serving, and the judge rejected their argument about the prosecution.

The Cosby jury will consist of 12 jurors and six alternates.

News groups mount legal challenge

As jury selection proceeded, The Associated Press and other news organizations challenged an arrangement that forces reporters to watch the proceedings on a closed-circuit feed from another courtroom. The camera shows the judge, prosecutors and defence lawyers, but not potential jurors who are being questioned as a group.

Cosby's lawyers objected to having reporters in the courtroom because they feared it could hurt their ability to find a fair and impartial jury.

Montgomery County President Judge Thomas DelRicci scheduled a Wednesday morning hearing on the news media's legal challenge.

Last year's trial was mostly a he-said-she-said. For the retrial, O'Neill has ruled jurors can hear from five additional accusers, giving prosecutors a chance to portray Cosby — the former TV star once revered as "America's Dad" for his family sitcom The Cosby Show — as a serial predator.

O'Neill also hinted during a pretrial hearing last week that he might keep jurors from hearing Cosby's prior testimony in a deposition about giving quaaludes to women before sex. He said he won't rule on that until it's brought up at the retrial.

The AP does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.