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| Comedian Bill Cosby, 81, is taken into custody in handcuffs at Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pennsylvania (AFP Photo/POOL) |
Norristown (United States) (AFP) - Disgraced television icon Bill Cosby was handcuffed and taken into custody Tuesday to begin a minimum three-year prison sentence for sexually assaulting a woman at his Philadelphia mansion 14 years ago.
The
81-year-old, once beloved by millions as "America's Dad," is the
first celebrity convicted and sentenced for a sex crime since the downfall of
Harvey Weinstein ushered in the #MeToo movement and America's reckoning with
sexual harassment.
Found
guilty on April 26 of drugging and molesting Andrea Constand, a former university
basketball administrator, Cosby was impassive when Judge Steven O'Neill handed
down the sentence Tuesday in Norristown, Pennsylvania.
After the
judge rejected a defense request to release Cosby on bail pending an appeal, he
was slapped in handcuffs, and led out of the courtroom in his shirt and braces,
his tie and blazer removed.
It makes
him one of the famous Americans ever sent to prison in a country where fame,
wealth and expensive lawyers have tended to help celebrities avoid the full arm
of the law in the past.
His prison
sentence means that Cosby can apply for parole after three years. His requests
will be reviewed by a special committee and can be rejected up to a maximum
sentence of 10 years behind bars.
"You
were convicted of a very serious crime," O'Neill told Cosby. "No one
is above the law."
O'Neill
also branded Cosby a "sexually violent predator," a humiliating
designation that will force him to register with police for the rest of his
life and to submit to mandatory counseling.
Prosecutors
had demanded five to 10 years, after the three counts of aggravated indecent
assault were merged into one, saving him a theoretically maximum sentence of 30
years.
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A Cosby
supporter holds up a shirt (AFP Photo/Brendan Smialowski)
|
'Justice
served'
"It's
been a long time coming, but today, justice has been served," chief
prosecutor Kevin Steele told a news conference.
"Finally,
Bill Cosby has been unmasked and we have seen the real man as he is headed off
to prison."
The actor
was filmed being put in the back of a vehicle, to be taken first to Montgomery
County Correctional Facility, before the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
and then onto a state prison.
Around 60
women, many of them onetime aspiring actresses and models, have publicly
branded Cosby as a calculating, serial predator who plied victims with
sedatives and alcohol to bed them over four decades.
"I
wanted 30 years but I'm very happy to know that Mr Cosby will do time in
prison," said Chelan Lasha, one of his accusers who testified at trial.
"That
he is touchable like he touched us."
Defense
lawyers wanted Cosby confined to house arrest, as he has been since his
conviction, arguing that he is too old and too frail -- the actor says he is
legally blind -- to endure a correctional facility.
Cosby's
publicist remained defiant, accusing the district attorney of using
"falsified evidence" and denying his boss the right to a fair trial.
'Crushed
my spirit'
"These
injustices must be corrected immediately," Wyatt told reporters.
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Profile of
disgraced US TV legend Cosby (AFP Photo/Gal ROMA)
|
"We
know what this country has done to black men for centuries. So Mr Cosby is
doing fine. He's holding up well. And everybody who wants to say anything
negative, you are a joke," he said.
Once a
towering figure in late 20th century American popular culture and the first
black actor to grace primetime US television, he was a hero for decades,
particularly among African Americans.
Across the
television-watching world, he was revered for his signature role, affable
obstetrician and father Cliff Huxtable on "The Cosby Show," which ran
from 1984-92. Yet even after being convicted, he expressed no public remorse.
He declined
to testify in court or produce any witnesses to emphasize past years of
philanthropic work as mitigating circumstances in his favor. His wife, Camille,
did not attend the sentencing hearing.
The case
involving Constand, a former Temple University employee turned massage
therapist, was the only one out of dozens of allegations against him that was
recent enough to be prosecuted.
"Bill
Cosby took my beautiful, healthy young spirit and crushed it. He robbed me of
my health and vitality, my open nature and my trust in myself and others,"
she wrote in a five-page impact statement.
"When
the sexual assault happened, I was a young woman brimming with confidence and
looking forward to a future bright with possibilities.
"Now,
almost 15 years later, I'm a middle-aged woman who's been stuck in a holding
pattern for most of her adult life, unable to heal fully or to move
forward."



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