After spending three years behind bars, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on Wednesday overturned the sexual conviction of comedian and actor Bill Cosby.
In its ruling, the state’s highest court said former
Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce Castor’s decision not to charge Cosby
in 2005, freeing Cosby to testify in a subsequent civil suit without his Fifth
Amendment protection against self-incrimination, allowed another prosecutor to
try him, according to court documents.
Cosby had relied on the former prosecutor’s decision not to
charge him when the comedian gave his potentially incriminating testimony in
the civil case, the Associated
Press reported.
Cosby, now 83, was convicted in 2018 of drugging and
sexually assaulting a woman in 2004, and had been sentenced to three to 10
years in prison, according
to CNBC. In a ruling authored by Justice David Wecht, the high court ruled
that he could not be tried twice for the same charge.
“When an unconditional charging decision is made publicly
and with the intent to induce action and reliance by the defendant, and when
the defendant does so to his detriment (and in some instances upon the advice
of counsel), denying the defendant the benefit of that decision is an affront
to fundamental fairness, particularly when it results in a criminal prosecution
that was foregone for more than a decade,” the high court ruled.
“For these reasons, Cosby’s convictions and judgment of
sentence are vacated, and he is discharged,” the decision reads.
Justices Debra Todd, Sallie Mundy, and Christine Donohue
joined Wecht in the opinion. Justice Kevin Dougherty concurred in part of the
opinion and dissented in part. He was joined by Chief Justice Max Baer. Justice
Thomas Saylor filed a dissenting opinion.
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