EAGLE, Colo. (AP) T-shirts mocking Kobe Bryant and defense access to DNA tests will be subjects for argument in open court Friday at a hearing in the sexual assault case against the basketball star.

But details that could be crucial to Bryant's defense _ the medical history of his 19-year-old accuser _ will be discussed behind closed doors.

State District Judge Terry Ruckriegle ruled this week that evidence and testimony expected to be presented during that portion of the hearing is too sensitive to be presented in a courtroom full of reporters who would disseminate it around the world.

Whether the defense can actually use evidence from the woman's medical records at trial will be decided later.

Bryant, 25, faces four years to life in prison or 20 years to life on probation if convicted of felony sexual assault. The Los Angeles Lakers star, who must appear in court for his pretrial hearings, has said he had consensual sex with the employee of a mountain resort where he stayed last summer.

In a bid to undermine the woman's credibility, Bryant's attorneys have suggested she took anti-psychotic medication and tried to commit suicide in the months before her June 30 encounter with Bryant. They have also suggested she had a ``scheme'' to make false accusations.

Bryant's attorneys on Friday are expected to present evidence and witnesses _ including the woman's mother and a former boyfriend _ in an effort to prove she has given up certain privacy rights because she talked about her medical condition with others.

The open portions of the hearing are expected to include a report from prosecutors about who in District Attorney Mark Hurlbert's office ordered or received T-shirts mocking Bryant as a ``cheater.'' The defense is also seeking more access to DNA tests on evidence in the case, a move Hurlbert has opposed.

Also Friday, Ruckriegle will hear arguments on whether to give the defense access to a single sentence of notes taken by a rape-crisis center employee during a police interview of the alleged victim.