Disclaimer: The article contains mentions of rape. Reader discretion is advised.
Bill Cosby addressed long-standing allegations in newly surfaced legal documents tied to a civil lawsuit. The entertainer reportedly admitted to obtaining multiple Quaalude prescriptions with plans to use them on women during private encounters spanning several years.
Bill Cosby made shocking admission about drugging women
Bill Cosby reportedly admitted under oath that he obtained seven prescriptions for Quaaludes from Dr. Leroy Amar, a gynecologist, with the intent of giving the pills to women to facilitate sex. Cosby allegedly stated that he never took the Quaaludes himself and always administered them to women. These statements were made in a sealed deposition related to a lawsuit filed by accuser Donna Motsinger.
Cosby acquired the prescriptions during poker games he hosted at his Los Angeles home before 1972 with friends. According to legal documents, Dr. Amar, a personal friend of Cosby, was a “disgraced” gynecologist. The California Medical Board revoked Amar’s medical license in 1979.
The deposition is part of Motsinger’s lawsuit, in which she alleges that Cosby drugged and raped her in 1972 while she was working at the Trident restaurant in Sausalito, California. She claims Cosby handed her a pill she believed was aspirin. After taking the pill, she experienced episodes of falling in and out of consciousness, as stated in her complaint. Motsinger says she later woke up at home, wearing only her panties.
According to the documents obtained by TMZ, Cosby’s Quaaludes were described as “round, white pills.” He admitted to refilling the Quaalude prescriptions seven times.
Cosby is currently attempting to have Motsinger’s lawsuit dismissed. However, Motsinger is continuing her legal fight, using Cosby’s deposition as key evidence. The events discussed reportedly took place prior to 1972, and the information comes from sealed testimony in this case, which is now referenced in newly filed legal documents and court records.
