Attorney Gloria Allred challenged comedian Bill Cosby, hounded by allegations of sexual assault, to meet his accusers in court or set aside $100 million to settle their claims.
"The public deserves to know if Mr. Cosby is a saint or a sexual predator," Allred said.
Because many of the
claims of sexual assault are decades old, Cosby would have to agree to
waive the statute of limitations, allowing his accusers to sue him.
"It could be advantageous for Mr. Cosby to give up the statute of
limitations because there is a huge cloud on his reputation and legacy,"
Allred said on Wednesday.
But she also offered a second option.
Cosby could put $100
million into a fund and anyone who claims she was a victim could file
and have a panel of retired judges decide the merits of the case and
award compensation.
"We challenge Mr. Cosby
to end this nightmare for both him and the alleged victims by accepting
either of the options," Allred said.
There was no immediate response from Cosby's lawyer Martin D. Singer.
Allred made the offer at a
news conference flanked by three women who say they were sexually
assaulted by the entertainer. Two of them represent new accusers.
Two of the women allege they were drugged by Cosby and sexually assaulted in the 1980s.
A third woman said Cosby
followed her and her friends around at a celebrity tennis tournament in
1973. She said he later grabbed her right breast at a restaurant.
Bill Cosby has defenders
A lawsuit
The latest allegations
came a day after another women, Judy Huth, filed a lawsuit in Los
Angeles Superior Court, claiming sexual battery and infliction of
emotional distress during an incident at the Playboy Mansion, according
to the documents first obtained by Radar Online.
The alleged sexual assault took place in 1974 when Huth was 15 years old.
According to court documents, Huth and a 16-year-old friend met Cosby when he was filming a movie at Lacy Park in Los Angeles.
After talking with the
girls, the suit alleges, Cosby invited them to his tennis club the
following Saturday, "where he served them alcoholic beverages and played
games of billiards."
They then went to the
Playboy Mansion where, the lawsuit says, Cosby asked Huth to sit on a
bed beside him, after she came out of a bathroom.
"He then proceeded to
sexually molest her by attempting to put his hand down her pants, and
then taking her hand in his hand and performing a sex act on himself
without her consent."
'Horrible, horrendous allegations'
The suit goes on to call Cosby's alleged actions "malicious, oppressive and fraudulent in nature."
"This traumatic
incident, at such a tender age, has caused psychological damage and
mental anguish for (Huth) that has caused her significant problems
throughout her life since the incident."
The case describes the damage as "substantial and continuing."
Huth is asking for damages and legal fees.
Because four decades
have passed since the alleged crime, it wasn't immediately clear if the
case falls within the statute of limitations in California for child sex
abuse.
It's because of that lag
in time that a legal analyst Joey Jackson says he thinks Cosby's
legal team will ask for the lawsuit to be dismissed.
"It's highly problematic, and it's likely the lawsuit will not stand," he said.
With the allegations mounting, a political contributor Van Jones said that now is the time for Cosby to speak up.
"At some point, his silence becomes almost kind of an admission," he said. "These are horrible, horrendous allegations."
Cosby has not commented on the allegations, leaving that to his lawyer.
In a recent statement,
Singer said it defies common sense that "so many people would have said
nothing, done nothing, and made no reports to law enforcement or
asserted civil claims if they thought they had been assaulted over a
span of so many years."
At least 20 women have gone public with accusations.
"He owes this country.
He owes his fans. He owes the women some kind of statement," said Jones,
who is also an attorney. "I think this level of silence for this long
is unfair to everybody."
Another allegation
Huth's lawsuit was filed on the same day that The Daily Beast published a story in which a man named Tony Hogue alleges he rescued a female friend from Cosby's New York brownstone in 1984.
The article describes
Hogue beating on the comedian's front door after receiving a frantic
phone call from the woman, who said, "Tony, you've got to come get me."
After Cosby answered the door, the story says, Hogue found his friend on the second floor of the home.
"She looked drugged and in a fog, and she couldn't snap out of it," he said. "She was a mess."
The Daily Beast reports this same woman was a witness in a sex assault lawsuit against Cosby, filed in 2005.
That case was settled before going to trial.
COMMENTS