Bill Cosby Sanctions, Humorist Bill Cosby recorded legitimate papers on Tuesday calling for court sanctions against a lady blaming him for rape, saying she broke their secrecy understanding in the hole of his full statement from a 10-year-old common case to the New York Times.
Cosby, 78, made the documenting in U.S. Region Court in Philadelphia contrary to late movements by Andrea Constand, a previous Temple University worker who has charged the entertainer deceived her into taking medications before he sexually struck her.
The claim she brought against Cosby was settled for an undisclosed whole in 2006, and all records from the suit were fixed until a government judge on July 6 discharged constrained redacted passages from Cosby's 2005 affidavit confirmation for the situation.
Those portions incorporated Cosby's confirmation under vow that he had acquired Quaaludes, the brand name for a narcotic generally mishandled as a recreational medication in the 1970s, with the aim of giving the pills to young ladies keeping in mind the end goal to have intercourse with them.
On July 8, Constand recorded papers in court trying to unlock the whole statement and her settlement concurrence with Cosby, and in addition to free her from any secrecy confinements.
The New York Times has following gotten its own record of Cosby's statement and posted extra passages on its site, uncovering affirmation in which the performer depicted how he had sought after ladies and how he acquired Quaaludes.
Cosby's own court recording on Tuesday focused on that the statement portions so far unlocked by the judge contain no confirmation that he occupied with any non-consensual sex or gave anybody Quaaludes without their insight or assent.
"Perusing the media accounts, one would infer that Defendant has confessed to assault," the record said. "But then Defendant confessed to just being one of the numerous individuals who brought Quaaludes into their consensual sexual coexistence in the 1970s."
The notice goes ahead to call Constand's solicitation to open the whole Cosby settlement to open examination an "undeniable endeavor to spread" the entertainer and says she ought to be authorized for releasing the almost 1,000-page affidavit transcript to the New York Times through her "own contracted court columnist."
"This huge rupture of convention and of the parties' settlement assention overshadows the insignificant grievances (Constand) makes in her movement," the Cosby recording states. (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Sandra Maler and Eric Beech)
Cosby, 78, made the documenting in U.S. Region Court in Philadelphia contrary to late movements by Andrea Constand, a previous Temple University worker who has charged the entertainer deceived her into taking medications before he sexually struck her.
The claim she brought against Cosby was settled for an undisclosed whole in 2006, and all records from the suit were fixed until a government judge on July 6 discharged constrained redacted passages from Cosby's 2005 affidavit confirmation for the situation.
Those portions incorporated Cosby's confirmation under vow that he had acquired Quaaludes, the brand name for a narcotic generally mishandled as a recreational medication in the 1970s, with the aim of giving the pills to young ladies keeping in mind the end goal to have intercourse with them.
On July 8, Constand recorded papers in court trying to unlock the whole statement and her settlement concurrence with Cosby, and in addition to free her from any secrecy confinements.
The New York Times has following gotten its own record of Cosby's statement and posted extra passages on its site, uncovering affirmation in which the performer depicted how he had sought after ladies and how he acquired Quaaludes.
Cosby's own court recording on Tuesday focused on that the statement portions so far unlocked by the judge contain no confirmation that he occupied with any non-consensual sex or gave anybody Quaaludes without their insight or assent.
"Perusing the media accounts, one would infer that Defendant has confessed to assault," the record said. "But then Defendant confessed to just being one of the numerous individuals who brought Quaaludes into their consensual sexual coexistence in the 1970s."
The notice goes ahead to call Constand's solicitation to open the whole Cosby settlement to open examination an "undeniable endeavor to spread" the entertainer and says she ought to be authorized for releasing the almost 1,000-page affidavit transcript to the New York Times through her "own contracted court columnist."
"This huge rupture of convention and of the parties' settlement assention overshadows the insignificant grievances (Constand) makes in her movement," the Cosby recording states. (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Sandra Maler and Eric Beech)

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