APNewsBreak: Cosby said he got drugs to give women for sex
FILE - In this Nov. 11, 2014, file photo, comedian and Navy veteran Bill Cosby speaks during a Veterans Day ceremony in Philadelphia. Cosby admitted in a 2005 deposition that he obtained Quaaludes with the intent of using them to have sex with young women. In court documents released Monday, July 6, 2015, he admitted giving the sedative to at least one woman. |
PHILADELPHIA
(AP) -- Bill Cosby admitted in 2005 that he got quaaludes with the
intent of giving them to young women he wanted to have sex with, and
that he gave the sedative to at least one woman and "other people,"
according to documents obtained Monday by The Associated Press.
Cosby's
lawyers insisted that two of his accusers knew they were taking
quaaludes from the comedian, according to the unsealed documents.
Nevertheless,
attorneys for some of the numerous women suing Cosby seized on the
testimony as powerful corroboration of what they have been saying all
along: that he drugged and raped them.
The AP
had gone to court to force the release of a deposition in a sexual abuse
case filed by former Temple University employee Andrea Constand - the
first in a cascade of lawsuits against Cosby that have severely damaged
his good-guy image. Cosby settled Constand's lawsuit under confidential
terms in 2006.
Cosby's side had fought the
release of the material, arguing it would embarrass him. Ultimately, a
judge unsealed just small portions of his testimony.
The
comedian's lawyers in the Philadelphia case did not immediately return
calls Monday. Constand agreed to the use of her name but did not want to
comment, her attorney said.
"This evidence
shows a pattern in which defendant `mentored' naive young women and
introduced drugs into the relationship, with and without the woman's
knowledge, in order for him to achieve sexual satisfaction," Constand's
lawyer, Dolores M. Troiani, argued in court papers.
Cosby,
77, has been accused by more than two dozen women of sexual misconduct
in episodes dating back more than four decades. He has never been
charged with a crime, and the statute of limitations on most of the
accusations has expired.
"If today's report is
true, Mr. Cosby admitted under oath 10 years ago sedating women for
sexual purposes," said Lisa Bloom, attorney for model Janice Dickinson,
who claims she was drugged and raped. "Given that, how dare he publicly
vilify Ms. Dickinson and accuse her of lying when she tells a very
similar story?
Celebrity attorney Gloria
Allred, who is representing several women, said she hopes to use the
admission in court cases against the comic.
Constand
accused Cosby of sexually assaulting her at his home in Pennsylvania in
2004. In his sworn testimony, Cosby said he obtained seven quaalude
prescriptions in the 1970s. Constand's lawyer asked if he had kept the
sedatives through the 1990s - after they were banned - but was blocked
by objections from Cosby's attorney.
"When you
got the quaaludes, was it in your mind that you were going to use these
quaaludes for young women that you wanted to have sex with?" Troiani
asked.
"Yes," Cosby answered.
"Did you ever give any of these young women the quaaludes without their knowledge?"
Cosby's lawyer again objected, leading Troiani to petition the federal judge to force Cosby to cooperate.
Cosby
later said he gave Constand three half-pills of the cold and allergy
medicine Benadryl, although Troiani in the documents expressed doubt
that was the drug involved.
The comic's
lawyer, George M. Gowen III, had argued that unsealing the testimony
could reveal details of Cosby's marriage, sex life and prescription drug
use and would be "terribly embarrassing." He also said the material
would damage Cosby among potential jurors in Massachusetts, where Cosby
is fighting defamation lawsuits brought by women who say they were
branded liars by his representatives.
U.S.
District Judge Eduardo Robreno had temporarily sealed some documents in
the Constand lawsuit but never ruled on a final seal before the case was
settled.
Under federal court rules in
Pennsylvania, documents must be unsealed after two years unless a party
can show specific harm. Robreno ruled that Cosby's potential
embarrassment was insufficient.
Robreno asked
last month why Cosby was fighting the release of his testimony, given
that Constand's accusations were already public. "Why would he be
embarrassed by his own version of the facts?" Robreno said.
In
court last month, Gayle Sproul, a lawyer representing the AP, called
the married Cosby "an icon" who "held himself out as someone who would
guide the public in ways of morality."
Troiani painted a starkly different picture.
Cosby
"has evidenced a predilection for sexual contact with women who are
unconscious or drugged. His victims are young, `star struck' and totally
trusting of his public persona," Troiani argued.
This
story has been corrected to show that Cosby's lawyers, not his
accusers, say two women knowingly took Quaaludes from him, and to show
that the alleged assault against Constand took place in 2004, not 2005.
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