Cosby jury: Chief accuser was ‘credible and compelling’
PHILADELPHIA — Speaking out for the first time, the jury that convicted Bill Cosby at his sexual assault retrial said Monday it found the comedian’s chief accuser to be “credible and compelling,” adding its verdict had nothing to do with the #MeToo movement or any another factor outside the courtroom.
The jury wrote in a statement that it had “absolutely no reservations” about convicting Cosby of three counts of aggravated indecent assault. The youngest member of the panel, meanwhile, said in a separate TV interview that the comedian’s own words about giving women quaaludes before sex in the 1970s sealed his fate.
Andrea Constand, now 45, testified that Cosby gave her three blue pills that knocked her out and then molested her at his home in 2004. The defence said it was consensual.
Cosby settled Constand’s civil suit for nearly $3.4 million in 2006, and his lawyers claimed at trial that she had framed him for the money.