This just does not look good for Cosby

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‘I’m No Longer Afraid’: 35 Women Tell Their Stories
About Being Assaulted by Bill Cosby, and the Culture
That Wouldn’t Listen


One by one, they came forward, finding safety in their staggering
number and a world that was finally ready to believe them.


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By Noreen Malone and
Portfolio By Amanda Demme


More has changed in the past few years for women who allege rape than in all the decades since the women’s movement began. Consider the evidence of October 2014, when a Philadelphia magazine reporter at a Hannibal Buress show uploaded a clip of the comedian talking about Bill Cosby: “He gets on TV, ‘Pull your pants up, black people … I can talk down to you because I had a successful sitcom.’ Yeah, but you rape women, Bill Cosby, so turn the crazy down a couple notches … I guess I want to just at least make it weird for you to watch Cosby Show reruns. Dude’s image, for the most part, it’s fucking public Teflon image. I’ve done this bit onstage and people think I’m making it up … That shit is upsetting.” The bit went viral swiftly, with irreversible, calamitous consequences for Cosby’s reputation.

Perhaps the most shocking thing wasn’t that Buress had called Cosby a rapist; it was that the world had actually heard him. A decade earlier, 14 women had accused Cosby of rape. In 2005, a former basketball star named Andrea Constand, who met Cosby when she was working in the athletic department at Temple University, where he served on the board of trustees, alleged to authorities that he had drugged her to a state of semi-consciousness and then groped and digitally penetrated her. After her allegations were made public, a California lawyer named Tamara Green appeared on the Today show and said that, 30 years earlier, Cosby had drugged and assaulted her as well. Eventually, 12 Jane Does signed up to tell their own stories of being assaulted by Cosby in support of Constand’s case. Several of them eventually made their names public. But they were met, mostly, with skepticism, threats, and attacks on their character.

In Cosby’s deposition for the Constand case, revealed to the public just last week, the comedian admitted pursuing sex with young women with the aid of Quaaludes, which can render a person functionally immobile. “I used them,” he said, “the same as a person would say, ‘Have a drink.’ ” He asked a modeling agent to connect him with young women who were new in town and “financially not doing well.” In the deposition, Cosby seemed confident that his behavior did not constitute rape; he apparently saw little difference between buying someone dinner in pursuit of sex and drugging them to reach the same goal. As for consent, he said, “I think that I’m a pretty decent reader of people and their emotions in these romantic sexual things.” If these women agreed to meet up, his deposition suggested, he felt that he had a right to them. And part of what took the accusations against Cosby so long to surface is that this belief extended to many of the women themselves (as well as the staff and lawyers and friends and others who helped keep the incidents secret).

Months after his depositions, Cosby settled the case with Constand. The accusations quickly faded from the public’s memory, if they registered at all. No one wanted to believe the TV dad in a cardigan was capable of such things, and so they didn’t. The National Enquirer had planned to run a big story detailing one of the women’s accounts, but the magazine pulled it when Cosby agreed to give them a two-page exclusive telling his side (essentially that these were instances that had been “misinterpreted”). People ran a piece in which some of the Jane Does told their stories under their own names, bolstering Constand’s account, but Cosby’s career rolled on. In 2014 alone, there was a stand-up special, plans for a new family comedy on NBC, and a high-profile biography by Mark Whitaker that glossed over the accusations.

The group of women Cosby allegedly assaulted functions almost as a longitudinal study — both for how an individual woman, on her own, deals with such trauma over the decades and for how the culture at large has grappled with rape over the same time period. In the ’60s, when the first alleged assault by Cosby occurred, rape was considered to be something violent committed by a stranger; acquaintance rape didn’t register as such, even for the women experiencing it. A few of Cosby’s accusers claim that he molested or raped them multiple times; one remained in his orbit, in and out of a drugged state, for years. In the ’70s and ’80s, campus movements like Take Back the Night and “No Means No” helped raise awareness of the reality that 80 to 90 percent of victims know their attacker. Still, the culture of silence and shame lingered, especially when the men accused had any kind of status. The first assumption was that women who accused famous men were after money or attention. As Cosby allegedly told some of his victims: No one would believe you. So why speak up?



FULL ARTICLE: http://nymag.com/thecut/2015/07/bill-cosbys-accusers-speak-out.html#patricia-steuer2


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Bill Cosby wants plea deal to avoid trial
and prison in sex crimes case: report


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© Ouzounova/Splash News Bill
Cosby wants plea deal to avoid


Bill Cosby is in the news again.


A new report in Page Six reveals the disgraced comedian, 79, is hoping to negotiate a plea deal that will allow him to avoid both a trial and prison time in one of his sex crimes cases, a source close to him tells the New York Post's gossip column.

A criminal trial is set for June in the case in which he's facing three counts of felony aggravated indecent assault for a 2004 incident involving former Temple University employee Andrea Constand.

"He and his family, including his wife, Camille, are adamant that Bill won't be able to convince a jury to let him off," a source close to the Cosbys told the newspaper.

The source added, "Cosby and his family believe he'll be eligible for a sentence of just probation... and remove the threat of him dying in prison."

The Cosbys are also hoping, continued the source, "that the district attorney will feel as though he's won with a plea deal and they're thinking that the DA will consider Cosby's age, his medical condition, the fact that he's paid the victim [in] the case millions, and the fact that his career is over."

On Dec. 5, a Pennsylvania judge ruled that bombshell testimony Cosby gave in a 2005 civil lawsuit -- in which he admitted to giving women drugs before having sex with them -- can be used as evidence in his 2017 criminal trial.

Upon learning of the ruling, claims the source, Cosby said, "It's fixed. I have no chance."

He is also convinced, says the source, that racism is to blame for his ordeal.

"[Cosby] truly believes that this prosecution is racially motivated," explains the source. "He's rich, he's famous and the world loved him. But if it were, say, a Robert Young or Fred MacMurray, if they were ever accused, America itself would not stand for it."

But as the Post points out, those actors -- the respective stars of "Father Knows Best" and "My Three Sons" -- who are also famous for playing beloved dads on hit shows, were never accused of sex crimes.

The "Cosby Show" star, however, has been accused of drugging, raping or otherwise sexually assaulting more than 50 women over the years, many of whom have tried to sue him amid his claims the acts were consensual.

In July, it was reported that the comedian -- who's free on $1 million bail -- has gone blind and has been stuck at home without much support other than wife Camille, who reportedly feels "sickened" and humiliated" by her husband's behavior.

A source told the New York Post that Cosby suffers from an eye disease called keratoconus that's gotten progressively worse over the past year.

"His alleged victims may take some solace in the fact that he's in his own personal hell," a source told the Post at the time. "He has been suffering from a degenerative eye disease and is completely blind... All his Hollywood friends have turned their backs on him."

When contacted by the Post, Cosby's spokesman had no comment about this newest report, and a spokesperson for the DA's office declined to speculate on a plea deal.


SOURCE: http://www.msn.com/en-us/tv/celebri...-report/ar-AAlqnco?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp


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The criminal justice system is antiquated and obsolete.

If a women voluntary goes to a person home and get assaulted. For this offense he should be put on low level public registry. Any women subsequently that goes home with the guy that gets attacked it is your own fault.

A guy that breaks into a home and attacks women should go to prison.

There is a primary and secondary layers of defense that women need to be aware of and not just relying on a person judgement.

Cosby could have been setup where after hearing stories about past behavior and knowing his high net worth put herself in a compromising position. After getting assaulted, seeks out a multi-million dollar settlement.

I find it suspicious that after wanting to produce another show on TV, these allegations come out that were dormant for years. This might be a non discriminatory/pretextual way to avoid doing business with him.

If we had a public registry, men like this can be productive members of society. These cases are disorders that could be treated for some men.

As in the case of Julian Assange, these laws can be used to setup people, discredit them in the eyes of the public. His accusers were linked to the CIA.
 
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