At impasse, Bill Cosby jury tests patience of judge, defense

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The jury in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault case  ended a fifth day of deliberations Friday without reaching a verdict,  testing the patience of defense lawyers and even the judge as it  struggled to break a deadlock by making repeated runs through testimony  given by the TV star, his accuser and others.

With deliberations passing the 50-hour mark, longer than the  testimony of all the witnesses combined, the 79-year-old TV star’s  lawyer complained that jurors were seeking a replay of the entire trial.  Lawyer Brian McMonagle also worried that some jurors might compromise  “their views and their values” for the sake of reaching a unanimous  decision.

“I believe this jury is tired, is weary,” McMonagle said late Friday,  as the jury wrapped up another marathon round of deliberations. “I  believe they are being compelled to come back with a verdict.”

Even as his attorney demanded a mistrial, Cosby himself thanked  jurors for “their long days” and “their honest work, individually.”

Judge Steven O’Neill pushed back on repeated defense requests to send  the panel home without a verdict, declaring that jurors could talk as  long as they wanted over allegations that Cosby drugged and molested a  woman at his suburban Philadelphia mansion in 2004. The judge had  instructed the jury to keep deliberating after it reported Thursday it  was deadlocked on the charges against the comedian.

Full story: AP News


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