List of Women Who May Testify on Cosby Just Keeps Growing

He is due in court for a pretrial hearing Monday
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 4, 2018 2:32 PM CST
Bill Cosby Prosecutors Want up to 19 Accusers to Testify
FILE - In this April 12, 2016, file photo, Kelly Johnson, then referred to as "Kacey," front left, one of Bill Cosby's accusers, and attorney Gloria Allred, front right, attend a hearing at the State Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Cosby is set to attend a Monday, March 5, 2018, pretrial hearing leading...   (AP Photo/Don Thompson, File)

Prosecutors in Bill Cosby's retrial want to call as many as 19 other women to the witness stand to show he had a five-decade pattern of drugging and harming women. Cosby is due in court for a pretrial hearing Monday, less than two weeks after his daughter's death, as his lawyers clash with prosecutors over how many of his accusers are allowed to testify at his April 2 sexual assault trial. Judge Steven O'Neill allowed just one other accuser to take the witness stand at Cosby's first trial, which ended in a hung jury last year. Prosecutors had proposed calling as many as 13. They added six more to the list for the retrial, including model Janice Dickinson. Cosby's lawyers have said they would seek to delay the retrial if other accusers are given a chance to testify. They said they would need extra time to look into the allegations.

Jury selection is slated to begin March 29. Cosby's lawyers wrote in a court filing that some of the other accusers' allegations date to the 1960s and are "virtually impossible to defend against." Cosby's 44-year-old daughter, Ensa, died of kidney disease Feb. 23. His lawyers have given no indication they would seek to delay Monday's hearing. Prosecutors are counting on other accusers testifying to show there was a sinister side to Cosby's public persona as "America's Dad," cultivated through his role as an affable Jell-O pitchman and family sitcom star. Cosby has pleaded not guilty to charges he drugged and molested former Temple University women's basketball official Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home. He remains free on bail. (More Bill Cosby stories.)

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