An email from a former district attorney in Pennsylvania could derail the one criminal case against Bill Cosby — a claim countered by current prosecutors, according to reports.
Former Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce Castor sent the email
to his successor last year, detailing an agreement he had with Cosby’s attorneys in 2005.
The reported pact says if Cosby testified in a civil case brought
against him by accuser Andrea Constand then that testimony would never
be used against Cosby in a criminal case.
“I can see no possibility that Cosby's deposition could be used in a
state criminal case, because I would have to testify as to what
happened, and the deposition would be subject to suppression,” Castor
wrote to then-DA Risa Vetri Ferman. “I cannot believe any state court
judge would allow that deposition into evidence.”
The current district attorney argued that Castor’s claim is bogus.
“There is a specific legal method to grant immunity. That was not done
in 2005,” current district attorney, Kevin Steele, who was elected in
November partially on the promise he would prosecute Cosby, told CNN
Friday.
Criminal charges were announced against Cosby last month, just weeks before the statute of limitations ran out.
Cosby was charged with sexually assaulting Andrea Constand, a Temple
University employee, at his suburban Philadelphia mansion in 2004.
Constand filed her civil suit against Cosby and settled out of court the following year.
The charges mark the first criminal prosecution of the diminishing star
and sets the stage for what could be a blockbuster trial involving some
of the roughly 60 other accusers who say they were sexually assaulted
by Cosby.
In the civil deposition, Cosby said under oath that he gave Constand
halved pills that he described as “three friends to make (her) relax,”
according to the affidavit.
He also acknowledged under oath that he obtained seven prescriptions in
his own name for Quaaludes for the purpose of having sex with women.
The deposition is considered a key piece of evidence, cited by prosecutors as the impetus for reopening the case.
The 78-year-old was released on $1 million bail and faces up to a decade behind bars if convicted.
In a statement Monday, Cosby’s attorneys claimed the charges against
the former funnyman were “illegally, improperly and unethically brought
by District Attorney Kevin Steele and his office.”
According to the statement, the charges “violate an express agreement
made by the Montgomery County District Attorney in 2005, in which the
Commonwealth agreed that Mr. Cosby would never be prosecuted with
respect to the allegations of sexual assault made by complainant Andrea
Constand.”
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