Bill Cosby openly admitted to giving Andrea Constand pills on the evening of the alleged sexual assault without telling her what they were.

In a bombshell sworn statement given by Cosby in 2005 and released in January 2015, and read Thursday in court, he told officers that they had ‘petted and fondled’ on the couch as they had done before.

When asked if he gave her the pills to help her relax he said: ‘Yes and I feel comfortable doing that.’

According to Cosby he gave her one whole pill and broke another in half. The comedian admitted that as an habitual user of five years standing he himself took two Benadryl that then made him feel ‘drowsy’ and that he would not take them before doing a show.

In a bizarre act, Cosby handed officers a bag containing three pills - one pink oblong one believed to be Benadryl, one green herbal one and a small white one which Cosby claimed to take for his heart.

Cosby is seen walking out of the courtroom during a lunch break after his sworn statement was read

Day four: Bill Cosby was seen with a new team of supporters, comedian Joe Torry (left) and Lewis Dix (far right)

Comic relief: The 79-year-old was seen laughing and smiling as he was flanked by fellow comedians

According to Cosby he and Constand had been intimate on three occasions - twice in his Pennsylvania home and once at Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut though he had never had intercourse with her ‘asleep or awake.’

He admitted to putting his hands under her clothing and on her genitalia but claimed she was conscious and a willing participant.

Asked if she ever told him that she felt paralyzed or had blurry vision he said ‘No.’ Asked if he had put her hand on his penis he said ‘I don’t remember.’

He said: ‘I never intended to have sexual intercourse with Andrea, like naked bodies. We were fully clothed and I enjoyed it and I went to bed. We stopped and talked a lot.’

He said he had not intended for her to stay the night but left her to sleep on the couch when he went up to bed.

Andrea Constand (pictured arriving at court on Wednesday) has changed her sworn testimony after phone records proved she could not have been drugged and unconscious on the day she claimed actor Bill Cosby sexually assaulted her

Gianna Constand, mother of accuser Andrea Constand, takes the stand in this court sketch

Day three: Constand's mother testified today and told the court Cosby had explained to her explicit detail how he allegedly sexually assaulted her daughter

The next morning he said he gave her a home baked blueberry muffin and made her a cup of tea before she left.

He said that their relationship was both social and romantic but that they had never discussed ‘going deeper.’

Cosby told police that his relationship with Andrea Constand was ‘romantic’ but that he feared she and her mother planned to extort him when he tired of her and the relationship ‘just became work.’

He also told officers that at times Constand’s thoughts were so disjointed that he once asked her if she had ever taken LSD or smoked crack.

Ultimately he said, ‘I got a headache just telling her what to do or how not to do something.’

Recalling the telephone conversation he had with Constand’s mother earlier that month he said that he had offered to write the nature of the pill he had given Constand rather than simply telling her mother over the phone because ‘I didn’t like where the conversation was going.’

He explained: ‘Three times her mother says to me that this is a horrible thing, what you have done to my daughter, it is something that a mother - I don’t think she said nightmare - she said it is something a mother hopes will never happened to her daughter.

‘She said this three times. She also said something pertaining to not knowing how long it will take Andrea to heal and not knowing how long it will take her mother to heal.

‘At first I apologized twice and then I said, “What can I do?” and she said, “Nothing. Your apology is enough.” So I asked that twice and she said, “There is nothing.”

‘I know Andrea so I call her back and I think, “I know Andrea has talked about graduate school so I call her back and say whatever, grad school we will pick up the tab but she would have to maintain a GPA of 3.0.’

Cosby said that during the conversation he felt ‘attacked,’ that he had told her mother that he had touched Constand’s breast and vagina but ‘guaranteed… there was no penile penetration.’

Asked if he was afraid that Constand and her mother might used this information to ‘extort, embarrass or humiliate’ him he said ‘Yes.’ Asked if he had been extorted or blackmailed before he said ‘Yes’.

Asked under what circumstances he did not answer.

End of Day Three: Bill Cosby, center, departs Montgomery County Courthouse alongside Sheila Frazier and his spokesman Andrew Wyatt

On Wednesday Andrea Constand's mother told the court Cosby allegedly attempted to buy their silence after she confronted him about the assault

Bill Cosby, third left, listens to Sheila Frazier, second left, and Frazier's husband John Atchison, left, as she speaks with members of the media

When asked if that fear is what prompted him to offer to pay for Constand’s education he conferred with lawyers then did not answer.

Cosby claimed that he always initiated sexual contact but that Constand had only once told him to stop.

He said they had been kissing and he lifted her shirt and took out her breasts. He said ‘This was the first time I put my lips to her breasts. She said stop and I did.’

He admitted that this was the only occasion on which he had an erection.

Cosby admitted that he never told Constand what drugs he gave her the night she alleges he sexually assaulted her, and never verbally asked for her permission to put his hands inside her pants and vagina.

Excerpts from the deposition he made 12 years ago in 2005, unsealed in 2015, were read out in Montgomery Courthouse Thursday afternoon.

They detailed Cosby’s account of what happened that evening and on three other occasions he claims to have had sexual contact with Constand.

He claimed that Constand came to his home on his invitation and that he gave her three pills - one whole Benadryl broken in two and one half - and told her ‘Your friends. I have three friends to make you relax.’

He claimed that about 15 minutes after taking the pills they moved through to the living room where he told her to sit on the couch and they began ‘to neck and touch and feel and kiss.’

He lifted his sweater and her top ‘so that we could touch. We rubbed and touched.’ He claimed they began spooning with him behind her, his mouth at her ear, and his hands inside of her pants.

‘I put my hands in her pants. She touches me it’s awkward. She then moves her hand and pushed my hand to move in further.

‘We do not talk I think I hear a sound I think she has an orgasm.’

Cosby then claimed that, far from being unconscious, Constand was awake and he urged her to ‘please take a nap.’

He claimed to have gone upstairs and set his alarm to wake her at an hour when it would still be dark and she could leave.

But when he came downstairs she was already awake and he ‘chastized’ her for not being asleep.

On Wednesday, Andrea (sketched) changed her sworn testimony when she discovered that her own phone records proved that she could not possibly have been drugged and unconscious on the date

He said that he gave her a blueberry muffin and made her tea and ‘She’s not asking a darn thing negative. She’s giving no sense of anything negative.’

When asked what he meant when he told police that he was interested in a ‘romantic relationship’ with Constand he described ‘romance’ as ‘steps that you lead to some sort of permission or not permission or will lead to wherever you want to end up.’

He described a sexual encounter he claimed to have had with Constand he said that he was sitting by her side, in front of the fire, rubbing her midriff that was bare in the top she was wearing.

He said: ‘I’m rubbng the middle which is skin now above the trousers and without talking I’m asking can I go further? I didn’t verbally ask her. I’m giving Andrea a chance to say yes or not that is right there in the question zone.

‘My hand is on her midriff which is skin I got her skin and it’s just above the hand and just above where you can go on the pants.

‘I don’t hear her say anything and feel anything and I go somewhere between the area of permission and rejection.

I’m going to where the area where a woman will stop you.’

Cosby went onto detail how he brought Constand to orgasm while she rubbed him ‘vigorously’ though he did not ejaculate.

When Constand perared to leave he described them as both ‘still feeling the glow, not lovers but warm.’

He said: ‘We’ve experienced sexual feelings. She does not say no. She does not say, “Never do that to me again.”’

He added: ‘I think I’m a pretty good reader of these things.’

Cosby arrived at court on Thursday flanked by fellow comedians, Joe Torry and Lewis Dix.

The 79-year-old appeared to be laughing and smiling with his support team as they walked into the courthouse for his fourth day of trial.

The comic had been accompanied by co-star Sheila Frazier yesterday morning.

Today, prosecutors are expected to show jurors an earlier deposition in which Cosby said that he routinely gave women pills and alcohol before sexual encounters and gave at least one of them quaaludes, a now-banned sedative.

In a bombshell testimony yesterday, Andrea Constand's mother took the stand and told the court how Bill Cosby allegedly revealed in explicit detail how he sexually assaulted her daughter.

Constand's accusations were challenged by a defense attorney during another round of intense cross-examination Wednesday morning

In a phone call recorded by Gianna Constand, Cosby is heard trying to buy her and her daughter's silence with an offer of helping Andrea establish herself as a sports broadcaster or paying for graduate school and travel.

She told the court about a series of phone calls that began with a harrowing call from her daughter on the morning of January 16 when Constand called her mother as she drove to work and uttered the words: 'Mom he drugged me and he raped me.'

Questioned by prosecutor Brian Steele Mrs Constand recalled how, after hearing her daughter’s account, she demanded she hand over Cosby’s telephone number.

Mrs Constand told the court: ‘I wanted to know what medication he had given my daughter.’

She said: ‘She was scared. I was too but I think the motherly instinct kicked in.’

Mrs Constand called Cosby who returned her call later that day. When asked what medication he had given Constand he told her mother he would have to check the prescription bottles and but that he could not read the labels.

Mrs Constand said: ‘He promised me he was going to send me the name of the medication. He said "I want you to put Andrea on the line" so Andrea was right there she picked up the extension. So the three of us were on the phone

Gloria Allred, who represented dozens of the women who accused Cosby of sexual assault, was briefly kicked out of the court room on Wednesday after she her cellphone rang during the proceeding

COURTROOM RULES Montgomery County Judge Steven T. O'Neill, who is presiding over the case, has tried to keep the media frenzy from influencing the case - having sequestered the jury, and banning cameras and cellphones in the courtroom Each day as they take their seats in Montgomery County Courthouse journalists and members of the public are vociferously reminded of the court rules of decorum.

Cell phones must not only be silenced they must be switched off - and put away, out of sight. Journalists may use their laptops for note-taking purposes only, they cannot be logged onto the court Wi-Fi or have anything other than note-taking programs open on their screens

On day one of the trial a violation was enough to warrant a sharp tap to the screen from one of the court officials and sheriff’s department officers who patrol the aisles like hall monitors peering across the benches on which media sit.

On the morning of day two it was enough to warrant an ejection. By the afternoon any journalist foolish enough to test the patience of the court officials - already frazzled from the pressure of having what Judge O’Neill has described as ‘the biggest sexual assault trial in history’ - was met with the full force of the law.

One journalist, cell phone out, was removed Wednesday afternoon. Earlier, those attending the trial were informed that he had been banned for the rest of the trial, charged with contempt of court and that a hearing was imminent.

Cell phones too have been the bane of Judge O’Neill’s tenure thus far both in and out of the courtroom.

Sheriff Officers clear the hallways for Cosby’s arrival each morning and after each brief break, with all the subtlety of a wrecking ball sending media and bystanders scuttling from its arc.

One very nearly toppled Cosby as he bellowed down the hall ‘Put your cell phones away!’ just as the defendant was being assisted on his passage down it. Cosby startled and clung to the wall as the command echoed on marbled.

Inside the court day by day and to Judge O’Neill’s increasing exasperation arguments and evidence have been punctuated by a variety of trilling tones.

On Tuesday, as a jazzy ring tone of which nobody was taking ownership piped through the court, Judge O’Neill stood in ill concealed fury and said, ‘Are you kidding me? Are we seriously hearing a phone in this court?’

And nobody is above the law. Wednesday morning, renowned attorney Gloria Allred, who represents several of Cosby’s accusers, was unceremoniously ejected minutes after the lilting chimes of her ringtone floated into the courtroom. She was permitted back in after lunch. Advertisement

'So Mr Cosby is having this conversation with Andrea saying to her, "Well Andrea lets tell your mother what happened."'

Speaking quickly and clasping and unclasping her hands Mrs Constand continued: ‘He’s going ahead and he’s telling me everything he physical did to her.

‘He said that he was touching her breast and he said to me. He called me mom throughout the conversation. He said, "Don’t worry mom there was no penile penetration just digital penetration" and he was talking to me almost as if he was trying to lead me to believe that it was consensual. Manipulating it.’

Mrs Constand grimaced at the memory as she continued: ‘He said I feel bad telling you this. I feel like it sounds like I’m a perverted person.’

To this point, Mrs Constand said, her daughter had not told her in any detail what had taken place that night.

She said: ‘I learned it more from the defendant than I did from her. He said to me mom she even had an orgasm.’

According to Mrs Constand: ‘Our conversation continued a very long time. I kept asking him why did you do that do Andrea. You and Andrea were friends why would you drug her?’

The comedian, who was only accompanied by his spokesperson on Tuesday, appeared to be in higher spirits on Wednesday as he was walked in by co-star Sheila Frazier

Cosby and Frazier were on screen together in the 1978 comedy California Suite, which also starred Jane Fonda and Alan Alda

The telephone conversation lasted more than two hours during which Mrs Constand said she said Cosby attempted to evade and manipulate and referred to himself as a ‘sick man.’

But Mrs Constand said she had ‘zero tolerance’ for ‘story-telling’ and ‘game-playing.’

Eventually she said 'he surrendered.'

Mrs Constand recalled: 'He said okay what can I do and what can I do for Andrea. I said Andrea will need therapy. He was willing to pay for it. He said "If there’s anything I can do…" I said the only thing I want from you is an apology.'

At which point, she testified, Cosby said, 'I apologize to Andrea and I apologize to you mom.'

Speaking later Mrs Constand said, 'I wished that I had recorded it.'

Detective Dave Mason gave Andrea Constand's (left) her first account of her sexual assault to the court on Tuesday. Constand told the officer that Cosby had given her blue pills that made her feel sleepy and turned her legs to 'jelly'

Constand had considered Cosby, then a trustee of Temple University where she worked as Director of Basketball, a mentor and friend

Mrs Constand did record a later conversation - played to the court - in which Cosby offered to pay for Andrea's education should she want to go to graduate school and asked Mrs Constand to find out if Andrea would still like to pursue a career in sports broadcasting.

Cosby's voice was clear in the tape as it played out in court. He told Mrs Constand: 'It’s important because if you find out exactly what she would like to still pursue…if you feel she could go to school because she's got to go to school she's got to hone those skills.

'If she wanted to do that then I would be willing to meet with you guys and lay out what [you] think is the best…Pay for the schooling and whatever, as long as she maintains a 3.0 average.'

At one point Mrs Constand, to whom the courtroom clearly warmed, placed her hand over her face and wept as the strain of the situation, the memories and the reality of what her daughter had told her proved too much.

She was handed a tissue by a court official and whispered to prosecutor Brian Steele 'I just need to get my composure.'

Constand's accusations were challenged by defense attorney Angela Agrusa (pictured) during another round of intense cross-examination Wednesday morning

Earlier she had told the court that, in the weeks following Constand’s return to Canada following her departure from Temple University, she had noticed a dramatic change in her daughter both physically and emotionally.

She said that Constand had developed physical ticks, would glaze over when watching TV with the family and would often scream out during the night, waking in a sweat from the nightmares that plagued her.

Yet despite her evident emotion Mrs Constand was robust under cross-examination. She utterly rejected defense attorney Angela Agrusa's suggestion that Mr Cosby's apology was not for a sexual assault but rather for the fact that he, as a married man, had had a relationship with Constand that had upset them both.

Agrusa said: 'And when he said that he was sorry, you believed at that point that he was in a relationship with Andrea? He was sorry that you were upset?

Mrs Constand was forceful in her incredulous reply: 'No I don't. He was sorry at what he did.'

On Wednesday, Andrea changed her sworn testimony when she discovered that her own phone records proved that she could not possibly have been drugged and unconscious on the date she claimed Bill Cosby sexually assaulted her.

Constand's accusations were challenged by defense attorney Angela Agrusa during another round of intense cross-examination Wednesday morning.

In January 2005, Constand first reported the alleged assault. She informed police in Canada - her home country to which she had by then returned - that the assault had taken place following a meal with Central High School representatives at a Chinese restaurant.

Cosby, the man who she regarded as a trusted friend and mentor, invited her to that meal which took place on March 16, 2004.

But telephone records, projected onto a white screen for the jury, showed that during the time frame that Constand had claimed to have been unconscious and assaulted she made a slew of calls - late into the night, including calls placed to Cosby.

Directing the jury to the phone records, Agrusa stated: 'On March 16 at 6.30 in the morning you put a call to your friend Sherry (Williams) at 6.30 correct? And then at 6.58 that's a call you placed to Mr Cosby and then you tried him again at 7 a.m.

'And at some point you go to that Central High Dinner. But if you look at line 291 you call Mr Cosby at 9.45 p.m. and then not even six minutes later you call Sherry Williams that same night.

'And then in fact you called Sherry again less than a minute later didn't you? And in fact four minutes later you called Sherry Williams again didn't you and this time you talked to her for about 12 minutes.

'This is the night March 16 that you were drugged and unconscious in Mr Cosby's home at about 9.15, 9.30 and you make a call to Mr Cosby to Sherry to Sherry and that same night at 10.06 p.m. and at 10.13 p.m. and you're on the phone once again at 10.06.'

Her voice rising, Agrusa came to her point: 'At the very time you told police you were drugged and unconscious you were on the phone making multiple phone calls.

'But you were passed out? There was no way you were making those calls.'

Rounding on Constand she said: 'You weren't drugged that night were you? You weren't sexually assaulted on March 16 were you?'

'No ma'am,' Constand replied.

Constand appeared calm and composed, smiling occasionally at the jury, acknowledging members of her camp in the courtroom.

Throughout her questioning Agrusa made a concerted effort to recast Constand not as a victim, but as a materialistic woman who had embarked on an illicit relationship with Cosby for personal gain then accused him in an act tantamount to extortion.

She repeatedly attempted to cast doubt on Constand's timeline and reinterpret encounters that Constand had recalled as uncomfortable and unwelcome as romantic liaisons that Constand had initially concealed from police.

Cosby scandal timeline 2002: Basketball coach Andrea Constand meets Bill Cosby March 2004: Constand alleges Cosby gave her 'blue pills to help her relax' at his home. Cosby insists the sex was consensual January 2005: Constand's mother calls Cosby to confront him about he alleged assault January 26, 2005: Cosby is interviewed with his lawyer about the allegations by police on Pennsylvania February 2005: DA decides against prosecuting Cosby for the assault March 2005: Constand takes a civil case against Cosby July 2006: Civil case settled July 2015: Prosecutors reopen Constand case as it was still within the statute of limitations June 2017: Cosby goes on trial accused of sexual assault Advertisement

Constand made her first report to Durham County Police in Canada on January 13. At the time she told them that the assault had taken place after the dinner and that she had known Cosby only six months and never spent time alone with him one-on-one.

Speaking just days later, on January 22 to Cheltenham Township Police in Pennsylvania, Constand had changed her story, according to Agrusa because, during the intervening days she had discovered that her timeline did not work.

She said: 'So now six days later you tell the investigators it wasn't after dinner. "He called me on the cell phone because we'd been in touch, he knew I was busy with my job and changing my career to massage therapy, he knew broadcasting was no longer an option, he know I was going to school for massage therapy."

Agrusa also pointed to the fact that Constand now admitted to having spent time with Cosby alone prior to that night, detailing the first evening Constand claimed to have spent at Cosby's home.

She said: 'You also told Montgomery County Detectives and the police that in addition to drinking wine you had brandy you were sipping.

'And that Mr Cosby, "reached over and he touched my pants and my inner thigh and was coming very close and he was touching my clothes and my waist and my inner thigh."

'So on that night - that first encounter that you have in Mr Cosby's home - he invited you into his home, a fire was going in the fireplace. And you sat down in front of the fire on the couch and you ate your dinner.

'And then he came and sat next to you and you were sitting side by side and the room was dark and there was a nice mood in the room.'

At this point, Judge O'Neill intervened to point out that he could not find any such words in the statement that he too was following.

Agrusa persisted: 'And the lights were dim and the fire was going..'

Unruffled and calm Constand responded: 'I don't remember how dim the lights were but I did have to eat my dinner so…'

Hammering home her point regarding Constand’s inconsistencies Agrusa stated: 'March 16 is an important date in this case. It went from being the night you were drugged and assaulted, to the night you thought about how you were going to confront Mr Cosby.'

In her later statements Constand told police that the evening of the Central High School dinner she had intended to confront Mr Cosby to demand that he tell her what pills he had given her.

Day two: Former Cosby Show actress Lili Bernard was seen arriving at Montgomery County Court Tuesday morning wearing a button which read 'We Stand In Truth' and holding a Gladiola flower, a print out of Ephesians 6, and an old photo of her and Andrea Constand

Determined to push the notion that Constand had a relationship with Cosby that she sought to conceal form police Agrusa asked if she had changed her hairstyle for Mr Cosby and if she remembered him giving her a $225 blowdryer so she could wear it in the straightened style that he preferred.

Constand acknowledged that she may have had her hair cut and straightened after a conversation with Cosby but claimed that it was only for head shots that he recommended she get.

Constand bombarded Bill Cosby with a slew of telephone calls to his homes in Pennsylvania, New York City and Massachusetts for months following the alleged sexual assault despite telling police she had ceased all contact.

According to telephone records seen in court today Constand called Cosby at least 53 times between January and the end of March 2004.

Under aggressive cross-examination which stretched into a second day, Cosby’s defense attorney Angela Agrusa highlighted the numerous phone calls that took place at all hours - often late into the night - and often multiple times a day.

She also asked Constand if Cosby had given her gifts of 'three cashmere sweaters, perfume and an expensive hairdryer.'

Constand replied, 'Yes.'

Cosby, who seemed to be in high spirits on the first day of trial, appeared more stony-faced on Tuesday

All smiles: Bill Cosby and his team walk from the Montgomery County Courthouse during his sexual assault trial on Tuesday

Asked if Constand had gifted Cosby, 'two shirts, hats, a long-sleeved Temple shirt, incense and bath-salts’ Constand again responded, 'Yes.'

Earlier Agrusa had established that Constand had received tickets to see Cosby perform in Canada in August 2004 - tickets for which, Constand said, 'her family had been asking a while.'

Five months before Constand made her allegations of assault, her mother, father and father’s friend attended the show. Her mother brought Cosby a gift of a Roots shirt but, Agrusa said, 'Mr Cosby didn’t greet your family did he?...And he didn’t come out and meet your family after the show did he?

Andrea Constand walks from the courtroom after testifying at Bill Cosby's sexual assault trial

'Your mother had an aide pass the gift backstage to him and Mr Cosby didn’t call to thank you. Did he?'

Agrusa then claimed that Constand had once again sought to get tickets to a show Cosby was giving in Canada that December - just one month before she made her assault allegations.

She said; 'On December 9, 2004 late in the evening, 23.26 you called Mr Cosby’s New York number and then just another minute later at 23.27 you tried him again. And then one day later again, late at night, this time at 10.08 you placed a call to Mr Cosby’s New York number and you never got a return call did you?

Constand acknowledged she did not. 'And you never got tickets to the show?' Again Constand said, 'No.'

But in an energetic re-direct prosecutor Kristin Feden sought to dismantle the defense on every pillar of their argument.

Alleged victim of sexual abuse by comedian Bill Cosby using the assumed name Kacey. Her name is Kelly Johnson and she was the first to testify on Monday

Victims of alleged sexual abuse by Cosby, from left) Lynn Neal, Linda Kirkpatrick and Kacey - Kelly Johnson - spoke out during a news conference with attorney Gloria Allred in 2015

The telephone records, she argued, told only a partial story. In reality the vast majority of Constand’s telephone calls to Cosby were made as return calls to ones placed and messages left by Cosby.

Further, Feden pointed out, not a single call was exchanged between the date of Constand’s departure from Temple University - after which she was no longer professional beholden to Cosby as a Trustee - and August when her family acquired tickets to his Canada performance.

Feden asked Constand if, as the defense asserted, she had reviewed her cell phone records in the time between her first police statement and her later accounts when she changed the date of her assault from March 16 to some time between January and mid-February.

Her answer was a clear, 'No.'

In fact the prosecution contends that police only pulled those records on 28 January - six days after Constand had already said she was mistaken in giving the date of 16 March.

Actress Keshia Knight Pulliam walks out of the courtroom with Bill Cosby after the first day of his trial on sexual assault charges

As for Agrusa's attempt to paint earlier encounters with Cosby as somehow consensual and romantic Kristin Feden asked Constand to read the answer she had given Montgomery County Detectives when asked the direct question 'Was it a romantic time?' Constand read in a clear and steady voice, 'No it was not a romantic time.'

Feden said: 'I hate to do this but I need to indicate to the jury where you have been consistent.'

Cross referencing between Constand's sworn deposition and the statement she first gave to Canadian police on January 13 and later police in Montgomery County on January 22 and February 9, Feden outlined the narrative told by Constand on every single occasion - that Cosby had given her pills that he told her were herbal.

She stated: ‘In addition you told the police that you told the defendant what you were experiencing after you took the pills.

'And that he assisted you to the couch after he gave you those pills…and…what he did to you once you were in that incapacitated state.

There's been no sign of Cosby's wife, Camille, who was expected to attend court proceedings to show support for her husband

Cosby became 'America's favorite TV dad' for his portrayal as Dr Heathcliff Hutxable on the Cosby Show. Keshia Knight Pulliam, who played youngest daughter Rudy (center) spoke out about the allegations last year saying she 'loves [Cosby] dearly' and he is 'innocent until proven guilty'

‘You [said] that he touched your breast, that he took your hand and put it on his penis, that he put his finger in your vagina (and) that you were unable to consent.’

Finally Feden asked Constand: ‘What was the one thing I asked you to do when we met (to discuss this case)?

Constand said: 'Tell the truth.'

Feden asked: 'And is that what you’ve done?' Constand replied: 'Yes.'

Constand finished giving testimony and left the stand shortly after 3 p.m.

Wednesday morning, Cosby was spotted walking hand-in-hand into court with onscreen co-star, Sheila Frazier.

The comedian was seen smiling with his team as they walked into Montgomery County Courthouse for the third day of his sexual assault trial.