Read a piece which gives a detailed timeline of accusations. The victims haven't been silent, rather, they've been ignored.
November 2002
Andrea Constand, director of operations for the Temple University women’s basketball team, meets Cosby. They become friends, and Constand claims that she sees Cosby, a Temple grad, as a mentor.
January 2004
According to court documents, Constand says that she was invited to Cosby’s home to discuss his possibly helping her with a career change. During the discussion, Constand says, she felt “stressed” and that Cosby offered her three blue pills to help her relax. In the documents, Constand claims that her knees became weak and she began to feel dizzy and sick. After helping her to the couch, Cosby allegedly “touched her breasts and vaginal area, rubbed his penis against her hand, and digitally penetrated” her.
January 2005
A year later, Constand reports to police what she claims happened in Cosby’s home.
February 2005
Tamara Green, in support of Constand, comes forward. Green claims that Cosby assaulted her in the 1970s shortly after she met him for lunch at a restaurant. Green, who claims that she was sick at the time, was given some pills by Cosby that made her exhausted. Cosby took Green home and, according to her, volunteered to undress her and put her to bed. A struggle ensued, and Green says that when she woke up, she found that Cosby had left two $100 bills on her nightstand.
When asked by Newsweek why she didn’t come forward sooner, Green said, “It never works out, unless you’re bleeding and there’s DNA and an eyewitness. I was 19 and he was the king of the world, so how was it going to work? I was a teenager. Nobody would’ve believed me.”
Later, the district attorney investigating Constand’s case decides not to bring criminal charges against Cosby, claiming a lack of evidence.
March 2005
Constand files a civil suit in a Pennsylvania court against Cosby. The case—in which she seeks $150,000 in damages—charges Cosby with battery and assault. Along with Constand, 13 other women with similar stories are mentioned in court documents as “Jane Doe” witnesses.
June 2005
Beth Ferrer, one of the Jane Doe witnesses, says that she had an affair with Cosby during the 1980s but that he drugged and assaulted her when the relationship ended.
“I woke up and I was in the back of my car all alone,” she says. “My clothes were a mess. My bra was undone. My top was untucked. And I’m sitting there going, ‘Oh, my God. Where am I?’ What’s going on? I was so out of it. It was just awful.”
February 2006
Constand sues one of Cosby’s attorneys and the National Enquirer for defamation, claiming that an interview Cosby did implied that Constand’s efforts were about extorting money from him.
November 2006
Cosby ends up settling the case with Constand for an undisclosed amount. None of the women brought on as Jane Does ends up testifying.
Another of the Jane Does, aspiring actress and model Barbara Bowman, comes forward with her story. Bowman claims that at 17 she was also taken under Cosby’s wing. Bowman says that Cosby became like a father figure to her, convincing her that he loved and cared for her. The abuse didn’t start, she says, until she turned 18. After that, Bowman says, the assaults happened several times on out-of-town trips.
“I was assaulted a number of times from age 18 to 19. Cosby would warn me before out-of-town trips, ‘You aren’t going to fight me this time, are you?’” Bowman recounted to Newsweek earlier this year.
February 2014
Shortly after several stories come to light about Woody Allen’s sexual history, Gawker publishes “Who Wants to Remember Bill Cosby’s Multiple Sex-Assault Allegations?” The story reignites interest in the case of Constand and the 13 women who joined her civil suit.
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