NORRISTOWN, Pa. -- Bill Cosby's chief accuser Monday rejected a defense allegation she manufactured her account of sexual molestation and was backed up by her mother, who said the comedian apologized and called himself a "sick man."
Andrea Constand withstood a defense cross-examination seeking to expose her as a con artist who set Cosby up, leaving the witness stand at his retrial without having budged off her allegation he drugged and molested her at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004.
"Did you ever fabricate a scheme to falsely accuse him for money?" Cosby lawyer Tom Mesereau asked her Monday.
"No, sir," Constand replied.
Constand, a former Temple University women's basketball administrator, remained calm and composed throughout her testimony, which lasted more than seven hours over two days.
Her mother followed her on the witness stand Monday and was more feisty, clashing with prosecutors when they asked her whether she benefited from Andrea Constand's $3.4 million civil settlement with Cosby. "She didn't buy ME a house," Gianna Constand snapped. "This isn't about money."
The mother testified about a phone conversation she said she had with Cosby about a year after the alleged assault in which he described in graphic detail their sexual encounter and then apologized.
She told jurors she was concerned because her daughter hadn't been the same since leaving Temple in March 2004 and moving back to Canada, screaming in her sleep and waking up in a sweat.
Gianna Constand said she was "very combative" with Cosby, demanding he tell her the medication he'd given her daughter and what he'd done to her.
She said Cosby told her he'd given Andrea Constand a prescription drug -- not the cold and allergy medicine Benadryl as he has claimed -- but didn't provide the name of it. She said he described how he'd touched Andrea Constand's breasts and vagina and guided her hand to his penis.
"He said to me, 'Don't worry, Mom, there was no penile penetration,"' Gianna Constand testified.
She told jurors Cosby said he "felt like a dirty old perverted man" and, at the end of the call, conceded he was a "sick man." Her testimony prompted Cosby, sitting with his lawyers at the defense table, to open his eyes wide.
Andrea Constand told jurors last week Cosby knocked her out with pills and then sexually assaulted her. Cosby, now 80, says Constand consented to a sexual encounter. His first trial ended with a hung jury.
At last year's trial, Cosby's lawyers suggested Constand and the former "Cosby Show" star were lovers who'd been intimate with each other in the past. This time, defense lawyers are trying to portray Constand as an opportunist who feigned romantic interest in him and then leveled a false accusation of sexual assault so she could file a lawsuit.
The defense said Constand spent late nights at the comedian's home, drove four hours to see him at a casino and called him twice on Valentine's Day, about a month after the alleged assault.
Constand has testified she saw the former TV star as a mentor and had previously rejected his advances. And she said her phone calls to Cosby were about basketball and had nothing to do with romance.
Phone records show Constand, the former director of women's basketball operations at Temple University, made brief calls to Cosby around the time of a Temple home game Feb. 14, 2004, the month after the alleged assault.
"You think you called Mr. Cosby to talk about basketball?" Mesereau asked her.
Constand testified she felt a duty to answer Cosby's inquiries because he was a powerful alumnus and trustee.
The defense plans to call as a witness a former Temple administrator, Marguerite Jackson, to testify before Constand lodged her allegations against Cosby in 2005, Constand had mused to her about setting up a "high-profile person" and filing suit. Jackson has said she and Constand worked closely together, had been friends and had shared hotel rooms several times.
On Monday, Constand testified she didn't "recall ever having a conversation with" Jackson.
A judge blocked Jackson from testifying at last year's trial after Constand took the stand and denied knowing her. At the time, Judge Steven O'Neill ruled Jackson's testimony would be hearsay.
The judge has ruled Jackson can take the stand at the retrial but indicated he could revisit the issue after Constand was finished testifying.
Jackson's availability as a witness for Cosby could be crucial to a defense plan to attack Constand's credibility and get jurors to believe she set Cosby up.
Prosecutors have called to the stand five other women who said Cosby drugged and assaulted them, too. The defense has called the other accusers irrelevant to the case.
If convicted, Cosby could get up to 10 years in prison on each of three charges of aggravated indecent assault.
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