NORRISTOWN, Pa. -- Bill Cosby went on trial Monday on charges he drugged and sexually assaulted a woman more than a decade ago, with prosecutors introducing evidence the 79-year-old TV star once known as America's Dad had done it before to someone else.
The prosecution's opening witness was not the person Cosby is charged with abusing, but another woman, who broke down in tears as she testified the comedian violated her in the mid-1990s at a hotel bungalow in Los Angeles.
Cosby is on trial on charges he assaulted Andrea Constand, a former employee of Temple University's basketball program, at his suburban Philadelphia mansion in 2004. His good-guy reputation in ruins, he could get 10 years in prison if convicted.
In her opening statement, prosecutor Kristen Feden noted the "Cosby Show" star previously admitted under oath he gave Constand pills and touched her genitals as she lay on his couch.
"She couldn't say, 'No,'" Feden said. "She can't move, she can't talk. Completely paralyzed. Frozen. Lifeless."
Cosby lawyer Brian McMonagle countered by attacking what he said were inconsistencies in Constand's story, disputed Constand was incapacitated and made the case she and Cosby had a romantic relationship.
He said Constand initially told police she and Cosby did not speak after their 2004 encounter, when, in fact, phone records show the two talked 72 times, with 53 of those calls initiated by Constand.
Constand, 44, of the Toronto area is expected to take the stand this week and tell her story in public for the first time.
The trial's first witness was Kelly Johnson of Atlanta, who worked for one of Cosby's agents at the William Morris Agency. She described an encounter she said took place in 1996 at the Hotel Bel-Air when she was in her mid-30s.
Prosecutors are trying to show Cosby's treatment of Constand fit a pattern of predatory behavior.
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