Connect with us

Entertainment

At trial, experts debate drug Cosby gave to his accuser

Published

on

The “Cosby Show” star has previously acknowledged under oath he gave quaaludes — a powerful sedative and 1970s-era party drug that's been banned in the U.S. for more than 35 years — to women he wanted to have sex with, but denied having them by the time he met Constand in the early 2000s. (Shutterstock)

The “Cosby Show” star has previously acknowledged under oath he gave quaaludes — a powerful sedative and 1970s-era party drug that’s been banned in the U.S. for more than 35 years — to women he wanted to have sex with, but denied having them by the time he met Constand in the early 2000s. (Shutterstock)

NORRISTOWN, Pa. — It’s long been one of the most enduring mysteries of Bill Cosby’s sexual assault case: What drug did he give his chief accuser on the night she says he molested her?

Cosby has insisted he handed 1 1/2 tablets of the over-the-counter cold and allergy medicine Benadryl to Andrea Constand to help her relax before their sexual encounter at his home outside Philadelphia more than a dozen years ago. Constand testified he gave her three small blue pills that left her incapacitated and unable to resist as he molested her.

A pair of drug experts — one for the prosecution, one for the defence — testified at the TV star’s retrial Thursday that paralysis isn’t known to be a side effect of Benadryl, though its active ingredient can cause drowsiness and muscle weakness, among other side effects.

And Cosby’s expert, Harry Milman, said he doesn’t know of any small blue pill that could have produced the symptoms that Constand described.

The “Cosby Show” star has previously acknowledged under oath he gave quaaludes — a powerful sedative and 1970s-era party drug that’s been banned in the U.S. for more than 35 years — to women he wanted to have sex with, but denied having them by the time he met Constand in the early 2000s.

Dr. Timothy Rohrig, a forensic toxicologist called by prosecutors, testified Thursday that quaaludes can make people sleepy. But he and Milman said the drug came in large white pills — not small and blue.

Prosecutors rested their case after Rohrig got off the witness stand. The defence immediately asked Judge Steven O’Neill to acquit Cosby and send jurors home, arguing prosecutors hadn’t proved aggravated indecent assault charges. O’Neill refused.

The defence also contended there’s no evidence to prove the alleged assault happened within the 12-year statute of limitations. Prosecutors countered that Constand and Cosby have both said the encounter was in 2004. Cosby was arrested in late 2015, just before the deadline to charge him.

As the legal wrangling continued, Thursday’s testimony focused on the drug taken by Constand, who has testified she thought they were an herbal supplement meant to relieve her stress.

Constand said Cosby called the pills “your friends” and told her they would “help take the edge off.”

She testified earlier this week that Cosby refused to tell her what they were when she confronted him about two months later. Her mother testified that Cosby told her in a January 2005 phone conversation that he’d have to look at a prescription bottle and would send the answer to her by mail.

She said he never did.

Cosby said in a subsequent police interview that he gave her Benadryl, then fondled her breasts and genitals. He said Constand never told him to stop.

Cosby, in a 2005 deposition read to jurors by a police detective, said he obtained seven prescriptions for quaaludes from his doctor in Los Angeles in the 1970s, ostensibly for a sore back, but added he did not use them himself because they made him tired.

He said he gave quaaludes to women he wanted to have sex with, using them “the same as a person would say, ‘Have a drink.”’

Rohrig, the director of a regional forensic science centre and medical examiner’s office in Wichita, Kansas, called quaaludes “an old-timey sedative, hypnotic drug” that at one time were believed to be an aphrodisiac.

Quaaludes have been illegal in the U.S. since 1982. They’re still legal in Canada and parts of Europe, Rohrig said.

The Cosby camp dismissed the quaaludes talk.

“Quaaludes were not blue,” the comedian’s spokeswoman, Ebonee Benson, shouted to reporters after the experts’ testimony. “Today should be the last day the discussion of quaaludes is had regarding these accusations against Mr. Cosby.”

Benson said prosecutors want jurors to accept “a fabricated story about three small, blue pills” and believe that they’re “somehow quaaludes.”

The expert testimony came on the ninth day of Cosby’s retrial on sexual assault charges that could send the star to prison for years.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.

 

 

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest

Tesla Tesla
Business and Economy8 hours ago

Since Tesla recalled its vehicles in 2023, there have been 20 accidents and investigators are asking why

Tesla is yet again undergoing scrutiny from federal regulators in the United States. The issue at hand now is whether...

man using laptop man using laptop
Canada News8 hours ago

Fractured futures: Upward mobility for immigrants is a myth as their health declines

Immigrant health research frequently refers to the notion that immigrants are generally healthier than people born in Canada but that...

students at university students at university
Canada News8 hours ago

Setting the record straight on refugee claims by international students

The Canadian government placed a cap on the number of study permits granted to international students earlier this year. The...

Environment & Nature8 hours ago

The scaling back of Saudi Arabia’s proposed urban mega-project sends a clear warning to other would-be utopias

There is a long history of planned city building by both governments and the private sector from Brasilia to Islamabad....

man wearing red polo man wearing red polo
Health8 hours ago

Can an organ transplant really change someone’s personality?

Changes in personality following a heart transplant have been noted pretty much ever since transplants began. In one case, a...

plastic bottles plastic bottles
Environment & Nature8 hours ago

Plastic is climate change in a bottle – so let’s put a cap on it

Plastic pollution and climate change have common culprits – and similar solutions. The penultimate round of negotiations for a global...

News8 hours ago

Four major threats to press freedom in the UK

Just five years ago, the UK took the bold step of setting up a Media Freedom Coalition of 50 countries...

President Joe Biden President Joe Biden
News8 hours ago

New Delhi rejects US president’s remarks that India is ‘xenophobic’

NEW DELHI – India on Saturday dismissed recent remarks by US President Joe Biden, who called India and other Asian nations...

United Nations United Nations
News9 hours ago

UN demands better protection of environmental journalists

NEW YORK – Marking the World Press Freedom Day on Friday, UN Secretary-General António Guterres highlighted an uptick in violence against...

PBBM PBBM
News9 hours ago

PBBM cites rich Filipino cuisine as PH tourism ‘entrée’

MANILA – Aside from captivating islands and beaches, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. honored the rich diversity of the Philippines’ culinary...

WordPress Ads