PHILADELPHIA
— Bill Cosby's admission that he obtained quaaludes to give young women
he was pursuing for sex could bolster defamation claims lodged by his
accusers, the women's lawyers said after The Associated Press reported
on newly released court documents.
Cosby in sworn testimony
unsealed Monday admitted that he gave the now-banned sedative to at
least one of his accusers and to unnamed others. His lawyer interfered
before he could answer deposition questions in 2005 about how many women
were given drugs and whether they knew about it.
"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 contends 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?"
The
AP had gone to court to compel the release of a deposition in a sexual
abuse lawsuit filed by former Temple University employee Andrea Constand
— the first of a cascade of lawsuits against Cosby that have severely
damaged his image as doting TV dad Dr. Cliff Huxtable on "The Cosby
Show" from 1984 to 1992.
His lawyers objected to the release of
the material, arguing it would embarrass him. Ultimately, a judge seized
on Cosby's public moralizing as he unsealed portions of the deposition
that had been filed in court.
"The stark contrast between Bill
Cosby, the public moralist and Bill Cosby, the subject of serious
allegations concerning improper (and perhaps criminal) conduct, is a
matter as to which the AP — and by extension the public — has a
significant interest," U.S. District Judge Eduardo Robreno wrote.
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.
The entertainer settled Constand's
lawsuit under confidential terms in 2006. Even the judge never saw the
settlement terms, although the documents show that Cosby at one point
offered the accuser an "educational trust" fund.
His lawyers in
the Philadelphia case did not immediately return telephone and email
messages Monday. The AP does not identify victims of sexual assault, but
Constand's lawyer said she consented to be identified although she did
not want to comment.
Cosby's lawyers insisted during the
deposition that two of the accusers knew they were taking quaaludes from
the comedian, according to the 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 women.
"The women have been saying they've been
drugged and abused, and these documents appear to support the
allegations," said lawyer Joe Cammarata, who represents accuser Therese
Serignese, one of three women suing Cosby for defamation in
Massachusetts. She has also agreed to have her name published.
Celebrity
attorney Gloria Allred, representing other women, said she also hopes
to use the admission in civil court cases against the comedian.
Cosby,
giving sworn testimony in the lawsuit accusing him of sexually
assaulting Constand at his home near Philadelphia in 2004, 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 frustrated 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?"
lawyer Dolores M. 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 Benadryl, although
Troiani in the documents voices doubt that was the drug involved.
Constand thought he was giving her an herbal remedy, she said in her
lawsuit. She recalls having him touch her breasts and put her hand on
his penis, and woke up to find her clothes askew, according to her
lawsuit. Cosby called any sexual contact consensual, according to
arguments made by Troiani.
"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," Troiani wrote in a motion to compel
Cosby to answer deposition questions.
Cosby had fought the AP's
efforts to unseal the testimony, with his lawyer arguing that the
deposition could reveal details of Cosby's marriage, sex life and
prescription drug use.
"It would be terribly embarrassing for this
material to come out," lawyer George M. Gowen III argued in June. He
also said the material would "prejudice him in eyes of the jury pool in
Massachusetts," where Cosby is fighting defamation lawsuits brought by
the women who say his representatives smeared them by accusing them of
lying.
Robreno, the judge, 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 sworn
testimony, given that the accusations in the Constand lawsuit already
were public. "Why would he be embarrassed by his own version of the
facts?" Robreno said.
Cosby resigned in December from the board of
trustees at Temple, where he was the popular face of the Philadelphia
school in advertisements, fundraising campaigns and commencement
speeches.
Lawyer Gayle Sproul, representing the AP, in court last
month called the married Cosby "an icon" who "held himself out as
someone who would guide the public in ways of morality."
Troiani, summarizing her evidence, 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.
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