DENVER (AP) Rejecting a prosecution appeal, the Colorado Supreme Court on Thursday cleared the way for Kobe Bryant's attorneys to ask the 19-year-old woman accusing him of rape detailed questions about her sexual past.

The court denied the appeal without comment, which means the woman will testify behind closed doors during a two-day hearing that begins March 24.

Prosecutor Mark Hurlbert said he was dismayed by the ruling.

``We continue to have great concern about the humiliation the victim is being asked to endure at the hands of the criminal justice system,'' Hurlbert said in a statement. ``Furthermore, future victims may not report their victimization for fear of similar humiliation.''

The defense is expected to ask the woman about previous sexual partners in hopes of backing up its claim that she had a ``scheme'' to sleep with the Los Angeles Lakers star. The defense also says injuries found on the woman during a hospital exam could have come from other sexual partners in the days surrounding her encounter with Bryant.

Defense attorney Pamela Mackey did not return a call seeking comment. An attorney for the woman declined comment.

Bryant, 25, faces four years to life in prison or 20 years to life on probation if convicted of felony sexual assault. He has said the two had consensual sex last June at the Vail-area resort where she worked and he was a guest.

Hurlbert had sought to limit the questioning, saying the woman would suffer irreparable harm by forcing her to testify about private matters protected under the state's rape-shield law.

``Basically the defense argument as to questioning the victim and her alleged partners about many of the alleged incidents amounts to nothing more than she has said `yes' to others, therefore it is more likely she said `yes' to defendant,'' Hurlbert wrote in his appeal. ``This is precisely the type of evil which the statute was enacted to eradicate.''

Prosecutors appealed after state District Judge Terry Ruckriegle denied their requests to halt the hearing and bar detailed questioning about the woman's sexual activities from the summer of 2002 to August 2003.

Hurlbert wanted questioning limited to the three days surrounding the alleged assault and the source of semen found in her underwear during the hospital exam. Authorities say the semen was from someone other than Bryant.

The prosecution said all other information is irrelevant.

Bryant's attorneys, however, say the information is important because it will show the woman had a ``plan'' to have sex with Bryant, perhaps to win the attention of an ex-boyfriend.

The defense has also suggested the woman was injured during sex with someone else, saying she had multiple partners during the week of her encounter with Bryant, including someone within 15 hours afterward. The woman's attorney, John Clune, has called that claim ``patently false.''