US judge rules Bill Cosby must stand trial on sexual assault charges

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Brian McMonagle, comedian Bill Cosby's lawyer, tells reporters after Tuesday's hearing on accusations of sexual assault that 'today, a United States citizen had his due process rights violated.'
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Attorney Gloria Allred says her client Andrea Constand's argument that she was incapacitated and unable to give consent to comedian Bill Cosby will be at the centre of the case.
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A Pennsylvania judge has ordered Bill Cosby to stand trial for sexual assault, ruling there is enough evidence for the entertainer to be criminally tried.
Bill Cosby departs the Montgomery County Courthouse after a preliminary hearing in Norristown, Pennsylvania, US on May 24, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

NORRISTOWN (Reuters) - A Pennsylvania judge on Tuesday (May 24) ordered entertainer Bill Cosby to stand trial on sexual assault charges over allegations that he drugged and assaulted a woman in 2004.

The ruling came after a preliminary hearing that Cosby, 78, attended in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, in which witnesses testified about statements that Cosby and his accuser, Andrea Constand, gave to police in 2005.

In court, Cosby responded with "thank you" when Judge Elizabeth McHugh announced her decision. She wished him luck.

Constand, a former basketball coach at Cosby's Temple University alma mater, is the only woman whose accusations of sexual assault have resulted in criminal charges against Cosby.

Once one of the most beloved US entertainers, Cosby has been hit by a wave of sexual assault allegations from more than 50 women, although most of the cases are too old to be prosecuted. He has denied ever assaulting anyone.

Constand told police she was attacked as she lay on a sofa"paralysed" by drugs the entertainer had given her, said a former detective reading from a transcript of Constand's police interview.

Cosby told her the pills would help her relax and "take the edge off." So Constand swallowed the pills, added a sip of wine and told the comedian that she trusted him, the former detective said.

Less than an hour later, according to Constand, Cosby sexually assaulted her as she lay incapacitated by the drugs she had taken, the former detective said.

Cosby's own 2005 interview with police in Cheltenham, Pennsylvania, where the purported 2004 assault took place, also was introduced as evidence.

Cosby admitted giving Constand 1-1/2 pills of the antihistamine Benadryl to relax her, Cheltenham Police Chief John Norris testified.

Cosby said Constand never told him to stop and was fully conscious during what he called the "petting" encounter, which he said involved fondling of genitals, Norris testified.

The hearing followed Sunday's Associated Press report of new revelations about Cosby from his 2005 and 2006 sworn depositions, including his admission that he gave drugs to a 19-year-old woman before having sex.

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