Cosby gave interview to hide sexual assault allegations

Testimony in federal lawsuit says interview was granted to ‘National Enquirer’ in 2005

Bill Cosby gave an exclusive interview to the National Enquirer in 2005 in exchange for a promise by the tabloid that it would drop a story about previously undisclosed sexual assault allegations. Photograph: Getty
Bill Cosby gave an exclusive interview to the National Enquirer in 2005 in exchange for a promise by the tabloid that it would drop a story about previously undisclosed sexual assault allegations. Photograph: Getty

Bill Cosby gave an exclusive interview to the National Enquirer in 2005 in exchange for a promise by the tabloid that it would drop a more damaging story about previously undisclosed sexual assault allegations, according to his testimony in a federal lawsuit.

Cosby was at the time facing allegations by Andrea Constand, a staff member with the basketball program at Temple University, Cosby's alma mater, who said she had been drugged and molested by him a year earlier.

In previously sealed court documents released Wednesday at US District Court in Philadelphia, Cosby acknowledged under oath in September 2005 that he sought to block the Enquirer from publishing its interview with Beth Ferrier, a former model who said he had drugged and sexually assaulted her in the mid-1980s, because he thought a second account would bolster the credibility of Constand's charges.

"I would give them an exclusive story, my words," Cosby said when asked in the deposition in the sexual assault case about his agreement with the Enquirer, according to the court documents reviewed by the New York Times. In return, the Enquirer "would not print ... Beth's story," Cosby said.

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"Did you ever think that if Beth Ferrier's story was printed in the National Enquirer, that that would make the public believe that maybe Andrea was also telling the truth?" he was asked.

“Exactly,” he replied.

In the past two weeks, more than a dozen women have come forward publicly to allege that Cosby sexually harassed, assaulted or raped them, sometimes after drugging them. Cosby has consistently denied the allegations, but several concert venues have cancelled his performances, and NBC and Netflix ended upcoming projects.

Cosby had been read a draft of the proposed article about Ferrier by John P Schmitt, his lawyer, and was told she had passed a lie-detector test. In his own interview that replaced it, "Bill Cosby Ends His Silence: My Story!" Cosby discussed the Constand case and tried to rebut the sexual assault allegations.

The Enquirer interview with Cosby took place in a hotel suite in Houston in February 2005, during a tour by Cosby. In its story, the Enquirer described Cosby as "furious" about the allegations. It also discussed accusations made by a woman named Tamara Green who appeared on the Today show that February and claimed Cosby had assaulted her in the early 1970s.

"Sometimes you try to help people and it backfires on you, and then they try to take advantage of you," he said in the story published in the Enquirer. "I am not going to give in to people who try to exploit me because of my celebrity status," he said.

The entertainer also thanked the tabloid for having offered a reward for information leading to the arrest of the person who had murdered his son, Ennis, in 1997. After the article appeared, Constand filed a suit against the Enquirer and one of Cosby's lawyers, Martin D Singer, charging that the article had defamed her. That suit and the one against Cosby were later consolidated and settled confidentially in 2006.

Neither the Enquirer nor Cosby's lawyers could be reached Wednesday evening for comment. In the 2005 legal deposition taken at a Philadelphia hotel, Cosby said he had struck the agreement with the Enquirer because "It was at a time when I did not want any tabloid-type accusations, sexual accusations going into a paper."

Cosby's relationship with the Enquirer had been considerably cooler in 2000, when he threatened to sue the publication for $250m after it ran a story in which it said an actress named Lachele Covington had complained to the New York police that he had fondled her during a dinner together at his townhouse in New York.

- (New York Times)