Cosby sex assault appeal takes on non-prosecution deal
PHILADELPHIA — Bill Cosby’s lawyers argued in an appeals filing Thursday that it was “fundamentally unfair” to let prosecutors use Cosby’s damaging deposition from a sex accuser’s lawsuit against him at trial.
Cosby believes he had a binding promise from a prosecutor that he could never be charged in the case, and said testimony from five other accusers about encounters that took place years — or even decades — earlier had improperly prejudiced the jury against him.
A spokeswoman for the Montgomery County district attorney’s office declined comment but said prosecutors would file a response in the coming month.
Cosby, 83, is serving a three- to 10-year prison term after the jury in his 2018 sex assault trial convicted him of three counts of felony sex assault over a 2004 encounter with accuser Andrea Constand.