His plan was to “meet her” and then “perhaps to have some moments with her that would have to do with some sort of friendship,” he said.
Donna Motsinger, one of the original “Jane Does” who came forward in Constand’s 2005 civil suit and has since befriended Constand, told PEOPLE that Constand was “ready, prepared” to testify.
Motsinger added, “She has no anxiety and is positive, as always.”
Ron Bull/Toronto Star/Zuma

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For most of the next year after the assault, Constand struggled with nightmares, sometimes screaming in her sleep,according to her mother, Gianna Constand.
“There was a change in her daughter’s personality and she’d isolated herself from her friends,” according to the affidavit. “Mrs. Constand attempted to find out from her daughter what was wrong with her but the victim simply did not answer.”
Finally, on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2005, Andrea told her mother.
“I had a flashback,” she said to police, explaining why she alerted her mom, according toa copy of her entire Jan. 22, 2005 statementto a Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, detective and a Cheltenham Police Department detective.
She hadn’t told anyone before because “there was an element of fear,” she told police. “Before I was going to say anything to anyone I had to put my own thoughts and feelings together. I was emotionally shocked. I was still traumatized about the whole situation. I had some emotional stress I was dealing with. I needed to come to terms with this on my own.”
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The Quaalude admissions were the reason Montgomery County prosecutors reopened Constand’s criminal case.
source: people.com