Comedian Cosby imprisoned for up to 10 years for sexual assault
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
After the sentencing, Cosby (centre) was taken to Montgomery County Correctional Facility. Net.

Bill Cosby was marched out of court in shackles on Tuesday, after a judge branded him a "predator”, and sentenced him to between three and 10 years in prison for sexual assault, capping the downfall of the once-beloved comedian known as "America’s Dad.”

Cosby, 81, was found guilty in April of three counts of aggravated indecent assault for the drugging and sexual assault of his one-time friend Andrea Constand, a former Temple University administrator, at his Philadelphia home in 2004.

He is the first celebrity to be convicted of sexual abuse since the start of the #MeToo movement, the national reckoning with misconduct that has brought down dozens of powerful men in entertainment, politics and other fields.

Cosby must spend at least three years in a Pennsylvania prison before he becomes eligible for supervised release, though he could end up behind bars for up to a decade.

Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas Judge Steven O’Neill ordered Cosby to be jailed immediately, denying Cosby’s request for bail while lawyers appeal the conviction.

He was escorted out a back door of the courthouse with his hands and feet shackled and driven away in a black sport utility vehicle.

Minutes earlier, Constand left court with her arms folded, a smile spreading across her face as other women who have accused Cosby came to hug her. Several of those women spoke to reporters in the rain outside the courtroom.

"I wanted 30 years, but I’m very happy to know Mr. Cosby will do time in prison,” said Chelan Lasha, who gave tearful testimony in court about the time she says Cosby drugged and groped her in the 1980s.

O’Neill also fined Cosby $25,000 and ordered him to pay the costs of the prosecution. There was no visible reaction from the disgraced entertainer as he learned his fate.

"Equal justice under the law does not allow different treatment because of who he is or who he was,” O’Neill said.

Cosby cemented his family-friendly reputation playing the affable Dr. Cliff Huxtable in the 1980s television comedy "The Cosby Show.”

"He hid behind Dr. Cliff Huxtable,” Kevin Steele, the county district attorney who led the prosecution, told reporters afterwards. "Before he was taken away in handcuffs, a lot of people believed this was who he was. We know otherwise.”

After the sentencing, Andrew Wyatt, Cosby’s spokesman, read a lengthy statement in which he decried what he called "the most racist and sexist trial in the history of the United States.”

Agencies.