NORRISTOWN, Pa. — The nearly four-year effort to jail Bill Cosby as a convicted sexual assailant reached the end of its first phase on Monday as a two-day sentencing hearing began in Pennsylvania.
The 81-year-old comedian will learn his fate following his April conviction on three counts of aggravated felony sexual assault for drugging and molesting a former friend, Andrea Constand, at his home in Montgomery County outside Philadelphia in January 2004.
Whatever happens at the end of two scheduled days of hearings will not be the end of the matter. Cosby is expected to appeal his conviction, which could be overturned at some future date.
USA TODAY is in the courtroom and will provide status updates throughout the two-day hearing:
Court hears arguments over sexually violent offender status for Cosby
The first issue before the court Monday is whether Cosby will be deemed a sexually violent predator. A Pennsylvania state board has recommended that Cosby be classified as such, which would mandate community notification of his whereabouts and lifelong counseling.
Cosby’s lawyer, Joseph Green, objected, arguing that Cosby is blind, 81, and unlikely to re-offend.
Dr. Kristen Dudley, a psychologist who is a part of Pennsylvania’s Sexual Offender Assessment Board, testified Monday, stating, “I completely agree that Mr. Cosby does meet the criteria of a sexually violent predator."
Dudley argued that Cosby used his friendship with Constand to develop trust in order to "take advantage of her" bribing her with drugs and alcohol until she was rendered unconscious and sedated.
Dudley said Cosby declined to meet with her, but she made her determination after reviewing police reports and trial transcripts. She has conducted 70 assessments for the sex offender assessment board and said she has recommended a "sexually violent predator" designation in about 20 percent of cases.
The sexually violent predator designation, if deemed appropriate, will have no effect on the length of the sentence. Instead, the designation would require him to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life and undergo treatment in prison and after.
However, if Cosby is given home arrest or a suspended sentence, he must comply immediately.
Explainer: What happens if Bill Cosby is classified as a 'sexually violent predator?'
Cosby, Constand arrive at courthouse
A grim-faced Cosby, 81, arrived in a black SUV, put on a dark suit jacket and entered the Montgomery County courthouse under overcast skies at 8:15 a.m. EDT, as a small handful of protesters shouted at him.
Constand entered the courthouse shortly after Cosby. Before the hearing, she tweeted a Bible verse: "Be wrathful, but do not sin; do not let the sun set while you are still angry; do not give the Devil an opportunity."
Cosby entered the courtroom — filled with accusers including model Janice Dickinson — with an expressionless look on his face, eyes slightly down and took his seat with his legal team.
More of your questions answered:
Why will it take two days and who will be allowed to speak?
When Judge Steven O'Neill scheduled two days for sentencing, he built in enough time for multiple accusers to make "victim impact statements" about what they say Cosby did to them and how it affected them.
At the time, it was thought he might allow testimony from any of the 60 women who say Cosby sexually assaulted them, including allegations that were never charged as crimes in Pennsylvania or anywhere else.
But on Thursday, O'Neill narrowed that field to just six: Constand and the five other women who testified at the retrial. He also offered Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele the alternate option of incorporating their testimony into the prosecution's statement.
Cosby's accusers: A complete list of the 60 Bill Cosby accusers and their reactions to the guilty verdict
How much time might Cosby get?
He could get a total of up to 30 years in prison in a sentence to be handed down by O'Neill, who presided over Cosby's second trial as well as his first one, which ended in a hung jury/mistrial in June 2017.
There is a complicated formula for calculating his sentence, based on such factors as prior record, which for Cosby is zero. The sentencing possibilities include a "standard" range, a "mitigated" range or an "aggravated" range for a person deemed to be still a threat.
There is no mandatory sentencing in Pennsylvania so the judge can decide within a range or beyond as long as he puts his reasoning on the record.
How long could Bill Cosby spend in prison? Possibly enough to make it a life sentence
Could he be in jail by Tuesday night?
Yes, Cosby could be sentenced and sent immediately to prison, in which case he would be handcuffed and taken into custody at the conclusion of the hearing. That is the aim of the prosecution team, led by Steele.
Or he could be sentenced and allowed to remain free while he is appealing, under similar conditions imposed after his conviction: house arrest with an ankle bracelet and limited to trips to see his doctors or his lawyers.
When can he appeal and on what grounds?
Cosby's third team of lawyers, led by Philadelphia attorney Joseph Green, can begin the appeals process as soon as O'Neill hands down his sentence.
One strategy for appeal might be to argue that prosecutors violated Cosby's Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. How? Steele and his team used a 2005-06 deposition he gave during Constand's civil lawsuit more than a decade ago as the basis for charging him.
While under oath, Cosby said that he had given Quaaludes, a now-banned sedative, to women in the "same way a person would say, ‘Have a drink.’”
After the guilty verdict, Steele called that deposition, which had been unsealed by a federal judge in July 2015 at the request of the Associated Press, a "decisive point" that allowed his team to reopen the case.
They filed charges that December, just before Pennsylvania's 12-year statute of limitations on sex crimes was due to expire. It was also just weeks after Steele beat incumbent DA Bruce Castor, whom he attacked for failing to prosecute Cosby in 2005.
The deposition was later admitted into evidence in his trials and read to the jury.
“The fact that a federal court unsealed it doesn’t answer the question of whether it was proper to admit it in this case,” Matthew Stiegler, an appellate lawyer, told Philadelphia radio station WHYY after Cosby's conviction. “I think this is likely an appealable issue."
But it's not a slam dunk: in 2016, Cosby's first legal team tried to get the charges dismissed on the grounds that Steele violated what they said was a promise made by Castor not to prosecute him if he agreed to that deposition. They lost.
What do Bill and Camille Cosby have against the judge?
Cosby and his lawyers have repeatedly called on O'Neill to recuse himself on the grounds that he never disclosed a longstanding grudge against Castor when he was first assigned the case and therefore is biased and unethical.
Last week, in his latest ruling on this issue, O'Neill said it wasn't news that he and Castor competed for district attorney 20 years ago, and Castor had appeared in his courtroom repeatedly for years.
“No ‘grudge,’ animus, bias or prejudice can be claimed because it simply does not exist,” O'Neill wrote.
On Sept. 17, Camille Cosby, the comedian's wife of 54 years, filed an ethics complaint with the state judicial board and demanded an investigation into O'Neill's alleged malfeasance.
However, her actions will not stop her husband's sentencing.
More: Camille Cosby lashes out at accusers, media and 'mob justice'
Contributing: Jayme Deerwester, USA TODAY; The Associated Press
NORRISTOWN, Pa. — The nearly four-year effort to jail Bill Cosby as a convicted sexual assailant reached the end of its first phase on Monday as a two-day sentencing hearing began in Pennsylvania.
The 81-year-old comedian will learn his fate following his April conviction on three counts of aggravated felony sexual assault for drugging and molesting a former friend, Andrea Constand, at his home in Montgomery County outside Philadelphia in January 2004.
Whatever happens at the end of two scheduled days of hearings will not be the end of the matter. Cosby is expected to appeal his conviction, which could be overturned at some future date.
USA TODAY is in the courtroom and will provide status updates throughout the two-day hearing:
Court hears arguments over sexually violent offender status for Cosby
The first issue before the court Monday is whether Cosby will be deemed a sexually violent predator. A Pennsylvania state board has recommended that Cosby be classified as such, which would mandate community notification of his whereabouts and lifelong counseling.
Cosby’s lawyer, Joseph Green, objected, arguing that Cosby is blind, 81, and unlikely to re-offend.
Dr. Kristen Dudley, a psychologist who is a part of Pennsylvania’s Sexual Offender Assessment Board, testified Monday, stating, “I completely agree that Mr. Cosby does meet the criteria of a sexually violent predator."
Dudley argued that Cosby used his friendship with Constand to develop trust in order to "take advantage of her" bribing her with drugs and alcohol until she was rendered unconscious and sedated.
Dudley said Cosby declined to meet with her, but she made her determination after reviewing police reports and trial transcripts. She has conducted 70 assessments for the sex offender assessment board and said she has recommended a "sexually violent predator" designation in about 20 percent of cases.
The sexually violent predator designation, if deemed appropriate, will have no effect on the length of the sentence. Instead, the designation would require him to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life and undergo treatment in prison and after.
However, if Cosby is given home arrest or a suspended sentence, he must comply immediately.
Explainer: What happens if Bill Cosby is classified as a 'sexually violent predator?'
Cosby, Constand arrive at courthouse
A grim-faced Cosby, 81, arrived in a black SUV, put on a dark suit jacket and entered the Montgomery County courthouse under overcast skies at 8:15 a.m. EDT, as a small handful of protesters shouted at him.
Constand entered the courthouse shortly after Cosby. Before the hearing, she tweeted a Bible verse: "Be wrathful, but do not sin; do not let the sun set while you are still angry; do not give the Devil an opportunity."
Cosby entered the courtroom — filled with accusers including model Janice Dickinson — with an expressionless look on his face, eyes slightly down and took his seat with his legal team.
More of your questions answered:
Why will it take two days and who will be allowed to speak?
When Judge Steven O'Neill scheduled two days for sentencing, he built in enough time for multiple accusers to make "victim impact statements" about what they say Cosby did to them and how it affected them.
At the time, it was thought he might allow testimony from any of the 60 women who say Cosby sexually assaulted them, including allegations that were never charged as crimes in Pennsylvania or anywhere else.
But on Thursday, O'Neill narrowed that field to just six: Constand and the five other women who testified at the retrial. He also offered Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele the alternate option of incorporating their testimony into the prosecution's statement.
Cosby's accusers: A complete list of the 60 Bill Cosby accusers and their reactions to the guilty verdict
How much time might Cosby get?
He could get a total of up to 30 years in prison in a sentence to be handed down by O'Neill, who presided over Cosby's second trial as well as his first one, which ended in a hung jury/mistrial in June 2017.
There is a complicated formula for calculating his sentence, based on such factors as prior record, which for Cosby is zero. The sentencing possibilities include a "standard" range, a "mitigated" range or an "aggravated" range for a person deemed to be still a threat.
There is no mandatory sentencing in Pennsylvania so the judge can decide within a range or beyond as long as he puts his reasoning on the record.
How long could Bill Cosby spend in prison? Possibly enough to make it a life sentence
Could he be in jail by Tuesday night?
Yes, Cosby could be sentenced and sent immediately to prison, in which case he would be handcuffed and taken into custody at the conclusion of the hearing. That is the aim of the prosecution team, led by Steele.
Or he could be sentenced and allowed to remain free while he is appealing, under similar conditions imposed after his conviction: house arrest with an ankle bracelet and limited to trips to see his doctors or his lawyers.
When can he appeal and on what grounds?
Cosby's third team of lawyers, led by Philadelphia attorney Joseph Green, can begin the appeals process as soon as O'Neill hands down his sentence.
One strategy for appeal might be to argue that prosecutors violated Cosby's Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. How? Steele and his team used a 2005-06 deposition he gave during Constand's civil lawsuit more than a decade ago as the basis for charging him.
While under oath, Cosby said that he had given Quaaludes, a now-banned sedative, to women in the "same way a person would say, ‘Have a drink.’”
After the guilty verdict, Steele called that deposition, which had been unsealed by a federal judge in July 2015 at the request of the Associated Press, a "decisive point" that allowed his team to reopen the case.
They filed charges that December, just before Pennsylvania's 12-year statute of limitations on sex crimes was due to expire. It was also just weeks after Steele beat incumbent DA Bruce Castor, whom he attacked for failing to prosecute Cosby in 2005.
The deposition was later admitted into evidence in his trials and read to the jury.
“The fact that a federal court unsealed it doesn’t answer the question of whether it was proper to admit it in this case,” Matthew Stiegler, an appellate lawyer, told Philadelphia radio station WHYY after Cosby's conviction. “I think this is likely an appealable issue."
But it's not a slam dunk: in 2016, Cosby's first legal team tried to get the charges dismissed on the grounds that Steele violated what they said was a promise made by Castor not to prosecute him if he agreed to that deposition. They lost.
What do Bill and Camille Cosby have against the judge?
Cosby and his lawyers have repeatedly called on O'Neill to recuse himself on the grounds that he never disclosed a longstanding grudge against Castor when he was first assigned the case and therefore is biased and unethical.
Last week, in his latest ruling on this issue, O'Neill said it wasn't news that he and Castor competed for district attorney 20 years ago, and Castor had appeared in his courtroom repeatedly for years.
“No ‘grudge,’ animus, bias or prejudice can be claimed because it simply does not exist,” O'Neill wrote.
On Sept. 17, Camille Cosby, the comedian's wife of 54 years, filed an ethics complaint with the state judicial board and demanded an investigation into O'Neill's alleged malfeasance.
However, her actions will not stop her husband's sentencing.
More: Camille Cosby lashes out at accusers, media and 'mob justice'
Contributing: Jayme Deerwester, USA TODAY; The Associated Press
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