Bill Cosby had himself admitted to obtain quaaludes, which are known for its depressing effect on nervous system, to use on women he intended to have sex with. The admission was made in September 2005, while giving a sworn testimony in the lawsuit filed by Gloria Constand, accusing him of sexual assault.
The recently released portion of an unsealed document states that Cosby answered in affirmation, when he was questioned that whether he had the intention of giving the drug on young woman in order to establish sexual relations, The Guardian reported.
The lawsuit was settled under confidential terms in 2006. Following the renewed series of allegations by several women on the stand-up comedian, Associated Press has requested the court to make the lawsuit document public, to which Cosby's lawyers had objected strongly, arguing that the release of lawsuit detail will embarrass their client.
However, a small portion of the document is unsealed on July 6, Monday, which has made it clear that Cosby used to store the drug, which is known for its sedative nature, in order to use it on his victim. According to the documents, Cosby's lawyers insisted that two of the accusers knew that they were taking quaaludes from the comedian.
"She meets me backstage. I give her quaaludes. We then have sex," CNN quoted a portion of Cosby's recollection of another incident in Las Vegas in the 1970s.
While the identity of the woman is kept under wraps, the details of the other incident are somewhat similar to those provided by one of the Cosby's accusers, Therese Serignese. She had claimed in November 2014 that the comedian had given her a pill once in a private dressing room, when she was just 19, followed by an unwanted sexual contact.
The latest revealation of documented confession by the 77-year-old comedian seems to be a powerful corroboration of the allegations raised on him by other women, who have accused him of drugging and sexual abuse.