Cosby paid accuser $3.4 million

Prosecutor reveals 2006 civil settlement as new trial begins

Bill Cosby (center) arrives Monday for his sexual assault trial at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa.
Bill Cosby (center) arrives Monday for his sexual assault trial at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa.

NORRISTOWN, Pa. -- Bill Cosby paid nearly $3.4 million to the woman he is charged with sexually assaulting, a prosecutor revealed to jurors Monday, answering one of the biggest questions surrounding the case as the comedian's retrial got underway.

District Attorney Kevin Steele highlighted the 2006 civil settlement during his opening statement, in an apparent attempt to suggest Cosby wouldn't have paid out so much money if the accusations against him were false. Cosby's lawyers have signaled they intend to use the settlement to argue that Andrea Constand falsely accused the former TV star in hopes of landing a big payoff.

The amount had been confidential -- and was kept out of the first trial -- but a judge ruled that both sides could discuss it at this one.

"This case is about trust," Steele told the jury. "This case is about betrayal and that betrayal leading to the sexual assault of a woman named Andrea Constand."

Cosby, 80, is charged with drugging and molesting Constand, a former employee of Temple University's basketball program, at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. Constand says he gave her pills that made her woozy, then penetrated her with his fingers as she lay incapacitated, unable to tell him to stop.

"She's unconscious. She's out of it," Steele said. "She will describe how her body felt during this circumstance. She's jolted during this. She feels herself being violated. ... And she'll tell you she remembers waking up on this sofa with her clothes disheveled at 4 o'clock in the morning. This is hours after this starts."

The defense will deliver its opening statement today in a trial expected to last a month.

Cosby's first trial last spring ended with the jury deadlocked. The comedian faces three counts of aggravated indecent assault, each punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

Ahead of opening statements, a topless protester who appeared on several episodes of The Cosby Show as a child jumped a barricade and got within a few feet of Cosby as the comedian entered the courthouse.

The woman, whose body was scrawled with the names of more than 50 Cosby accusers as well as the words "Women's Lives Matter," ran in front of Cosby and toward a bank of TV cameras but was intercepted by sheriff's deputies and led away in handcuffs.

The protester, Nicolle Rochelle, 39, of Little Falls, N.J., was charged with disorderly conduct and released.

Opening statements were delayed for several hours while the judge sorted through allegations raised late Friday that a juror told a woman during jury selection that he thought Cosby was guilty.

After questioning all 12 jurors and six alternates privately, Judge Steven O'Neill ruled the juror could stay, saying all the panelists told him they vowed to remain fair and impartial.

Prosecutors have lined up a parade of five additional accusers to make the case that the man revered as "America's Dad" lived a double life as one of Hollywood's biggest predators. Only one accuser took the stand at the first trial.

Information for this article was contributed by Angela Charlton of The Associated Press.

A Section on 04/10/2018

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