Bond told the players that he had bought marijuana from the woman and that she bought it by the pound, according to the statement, read by Detective Fred Mole.
Bond called the woman the night of the robbery, went to her building, on Lancaster Avenue near 35th Street, and was buzzed in by her, police said. Before going upstairs, he propped open the door with napkins.
As Bond was leaving about 10 minutes later, two masked men wearing hoodies pushed him back inside the apartment, the woman testified. Harris, 21, forced Bond to the floor at gunpoint, she said, while Phillip, 21, put a gun to her head and demanded money.
"He kept asking me for money, over and over again," the woman calmly told Municipal Judge Frank Brady.
"I'll never forget those eyes," she said about Phillip, whose face was partially covered with a bandanna.
The woman said she had no money, so the robbers fled with two cell phones. Shortly after the gunmen had gone, she said, Bond got up from the floor and left without saying anything.
Bond, whom she said she has known for three years from campus, did not appear to be cooperating with the robbers and looked scared, she said. She denied having any drugs in the apartment.
Brady held the three men for trial on all charges, including robbery, burglary, theft and possession of an instrument of crime.
A robbery conviction carries a 10-to-20-year prison sentence.
"I want them to be held responsible for what they did," Assistant District Attorney Bill Davis said.
All three are free on bail and no longer attend Drexel.
Brian Humble, Bond's attorney, argued that his client was a victim of the robbery too, a fact corroborated by the victim's testimony, he said.
Defense attorneys Scott Di Claudio for Phillip and Gregory Pagano for Harris said their clients had not robbed anyone and would be exonerated. They both questioned Bond's credibility.
"Mr. Bond is not believable. He's a corrupt and polluted source in the eyes of the law," said Pagano, who added that the victim was not able to identify Harris in a police lineup last week. "His motives in implicating my client are suspect."
Di Claudio questioned how the prosecution could claim the female victim was not a drug dealer while using as evidence Bond's statement in which he said she was.