Model Dickinson claims sexual assault by sitcom comic Cosby
Model and TV host Janice Dickinson added her name to the women who have accused comic Bill Cosby of sexual assault.
In an Entertainment Tonight interview that aired on Tuesday, Dickinson said that the 1982 incident occurred at a hotel in Lake Tahoe, California, where Cosby was appearing.
She told the TV news magazine that she wrote about the assault in her 2002 autobiography, No Lifeguard on Duty: The Accidental Life of the World's First Supermodel, but that Cosby and his lawyers pressured her and the publisher to remove the details.
A call to Cosby's publicist seeking comment was not immediately returned.
In the interview, Dickinson said she met Cosby in Lake Tahoe at his urging, after he said that he would help her with her singing career. Her agent introduced them earlier, as she hoped she could get a job on The Cosby Show.
Dickinson said that, after dinner, she and Cosby went to her hotel room, where he gave her some red wine and a pill. She told Entertainment Tonight that she had asked for a pill because she had been suffering stomach pains.
"The next morning I woke up and I wasn't wearing my pajamas, and I remembered before I passed out I had been sexually assaulted by this man," she said.
She said she remembered Cosby dropping the robe he had been wearing and getting on top of her.
She said she never confronted Cosby about the incident.
"I'm doing this because it's the right thing to do, and this happened to me, and this is a true story," she said.
In the memoir, Dickinson described stopping at Cosby's hotel room door when he invited her in after dinner. She declined, claiming exhaustion.
"After all I've done for you, that's what I get?" Dickinson quoted Cosby as saying. He then "gave me the dirtiest, meanest look in the world, stepped into his suite and slammed the door in my face".
Cosby, 77, who was never criminally charged in any case, settled a civil suit in 2006 with another woman over an alleged incident two years before.
Attention to the legendary entertainer's past flared suddenly in recent weeks after another comic, Hannibal Buress, called Cosby a "rapist" during a Philadelphia performance. Two other women have emerged as accusers, including Barbara Bowman, who wrote an online article for The Washington Post.
Cosby has remained silent, and his attorney, John P. Schmitt, issued a statement Sunday saying his client would not dignify "decade-old, discredited" claims of sexual abuse with a response. Schmitt later exempted the 2006 civil case from the blanket statement.
Model and television personality Janice Dickinson is adding her name to the women who have accused comic Bill Cosby of sexual assault. Dan Steinberg / Invision / AP |