Bill Cosby's day of reckoning as he arrives in court for sentencing

Bill Cosby's day of reckoning as he arrives in court for sentencing

Anticipation inside and outside a Pennsylvania courthouse was growing Monday morning as Bill Cosby arrived for sentencing as the first major celebrity convicted in the #MeToo era for sexually abusing a woman.

When the Montgomery County Court in Norristown opened its doors at 9 a.m., there was already a line of people outside waiting to get a seat in the courtroom for Cosby’s sentencing.

Cosby, 81, does not plan to speak during the sentencing hearing, which could take up to two days, nor is he expected to call witnesses to speak on his behalf, his spokesman Andrew Wyatt said.

“He’s said everything he’s got to say,” Wyatt said.

Inside the courthouse, across a marble balcony overlooking an atrium from where news reporters were lined up 30 deep waiting to get the best seats in court, one of the jurors who convicted Cosby this spring was spotted slipping into a court office.

He declined to comment when approached by an ABC News reporter.

Also filing into the courtroom were Andrea Constand, the primary accuser in both Cosby trials, and former model Janice Dickinson, who testified during the second trial that Cosby drugged and raped her in 1982 in a Lake Tahoe, California, hotel room.

Outside, as a phalanx of camera crews lined the path, Cosby walked from his black SUV into the courthouse. One of those outside the courthouse waiting for Cosby was a frequent protester Bird Milliken, who came with an effigy of Cosby in a shopping cart with a bright pink sign around the neck, reading, “America’s First #MeToo Conviction,” followed by the words. “Guilty, Guilty, Guilty.”

Milliken, also known the “Bubble Lady” for the bubble machine she totes around, is an ardent supporter of Cosby’s accusers. During the second trial, she got Constand to autograph her arm.

Milliken later had the signature tattooed to her arm permanently.

Cosby was convicted in April on three felony counts of aggravated indecent assault stemming from drugging and molesting Constand in his suburban Philadelphia home 14 years ago.

The conviction came about 11 months after a mistrial was declared in Cosby’s first trial when a jury failed to reach a verdict.

The jury of seven men and five women deliberated a little over 12 hours before reaching a unanimous verdict in the case.

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