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Jurors can hear Cosby’s decade-old testimony about giving women quaaludes

Bill Cosby arrives at the Montgomery County Courthouse on Tuesday.
Bill Cosby arrives at the Montgomery County Courthouse on Tuesday.
(Matt Slocum / AP)
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Jurors in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault trial will be allowed to hear his decade-old testimony about giving quaaludes to women before sex, a judge ruled Tuesday, handing the prosecution a key victory in its effort to portray the comedian as a serial predator.

Judge Steven O’Neill said prosecutors can have the “Cosby Show” star’s deposition testimony read into the record.

Cosby, 80, is on trial on charges he drugged and molested former Temple University basketball administrator Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia mansion in 2004. The deposition was also included at his first trial, which ended with a hung jury last year.

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Prosecutors used another of Cosby’s statements — this one to police — to show how he described the encounter with Constand in 2005.

Cosby said he gave Constand 1½ tablets of the cold and allergy medicine Benadryl to help her relax, then fondled her breasts and genitals, according to the transcript, which was read to the jury Tuesday morning.

Cosby said Constand never told him to stop.

“We are petting. I enjoyed it,” the TV star said, according to the transcript. “And then I stopped and I went up to bed. We stopped and then we talked.”

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Bill Cosby's spokesman Andrew Wyatt holds up a package of Benadryl tablets as he speaks to the media during a break in Cosby's sexual assault trial.
(Matt Slocum / AP )

Constand says Cosby knocked her out with the pills and then sexually assaulted her, penetrating her with his fingers and guiding her hand to his penis. Cosby told police he didn’t remember whether Constand touched his genitals.

The jury was expected to hear later about Cosby’s acknowledged use of quaaludes, a popular party drug in the 1970s that was banned in the U.S. in 1982, to help get women to have sex with him.

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Testifying under oath in 2005 as part of Constand’s civil suit against him, Cosby said he had obtained several prescriptions for quaaludes from his doctor in Los Angeles in the 1970s, ostensibly for a sore back. The comedian said he never took the drug, instead giving it to women he wanted to have sex with “the same as a person would say, ‘Have a drink.’”

“Quaaludes happen to be the drug that kids, young people were using to party with, and there were times when I wanted to have them just in case,” Cosby testified.

The entertainer ultimately settled Constand’s lawsuit for nearly $3.4 million.

Cosby’s lawyers argued the testimony is irrelevant to his retrial because there is no evidence he gave Constand the drug. Prosecutors have suggested otherwise.

The unsealing of the deposition led prosecutors to reopen Cosby’s criminal case in 2015.

A police sergeant who investigated Constand’s allegation a decade earlier testified Tuesday that the probe was abruptly shut down before police had finished their work.

Cheltenham Township Police Sgt. Richard Schaffer told jurors that then-Dist. Atty. Bruce Castor announced he was closing the probe hours after investigators met to discuss leads that needed to be followed up — and just four weeks after Constand went to police. Castor has said the evidence showed both parties “could be held in less than a flattering light.”

On Monday, Constand rejected defense allegations that she concocted her story to score a big payday, and her mother testified that Cosby apologized in a phone call and called himself a “sick man.”

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Andrea and Gianna Constand’s testimony followed that of five additional accusers who told jurors that Cosby had drugged and assaulted them two decades earlier.

As Cosby arrived at the courthouse Tuesday, his spokeswoman Ebonee Benson told reporters that the Constands’ testimony “seemed to be more colorful and more embellished” than at the first trial.

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