Edmonton Journal

VICTIMS GET ‘LAST LAUGH’

WOMEN CHEER END TO COSBY’S ‘REIGN OF TERROR’

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As Bill Cosby was sentenced the jail, Andrea Constand, the Canadian woman who brought about his downfall, smiled broadly and was hugged by others in the courtroom.

In a statement submitted to the court and released Tuesday, Constand, 45, a Toronto native, said that she had to cope with years of anxiety and self-doubt after being sexually assaulted by Cosby. She said she now lived alone with her two dogs and had trouble trusting people.

“When the sexual assault happened, I was a young woman brimming with confidence and looking forward to a future bright with possibilit­ies,” she wrote in her five-page statement. “Now, almost 15 years later, I’m a middle-aged woman who’s been stuck in a holding pattern for most of her adult life, unable to heal fully or to move forward.”

She also wrote of Cosby: “We may never know the full extent of his double life as a sexual predator, but his decades-long reign of terror as a serial rapist is over.”

Constand, then a 31-yearold Temple University women’s basketball official, went to police a year after waking up in a fog at Cosby’s gated estate, her clothes askew, only to have the district attorney pass on the case.

Another district attorney reopened the file a decade later and charged the TV star after standup comic Hannibal Buress’ riff about Cosby being a rapist prompted more accusers to come forward.

More than 60 women accused Cosby of sexual assault or harassment. In countless media interviews, the women — including aspiring actresses and models, flight attendants, singers and, in one instance, a doughnutsh­op clerk — gave similar accounts of being dazzled by Cosby’s fame.

Most said they never thought anyone would believe them, so they stayed quiet, privately harbouring experience­s that many said had scarred them for life.

On Tuesday, more than a dozen of those women crowded into the suburban Philadelph­ia courtroom. Tamara Green, a model who said Cosby drugged and groped her around 1969 or 1970, drove alone crosscount­ry in an RV from her home in the San Diego area.

When her vehicle broke down in rural Tennessee, Green — now an attorney — left it there, hopping a plane to Pennsylvan­ia. Linda Kirkpatric­k, who said Cosby drugged her after a tennis tournament in 1981, stepped away from her Bundt cake bakery in Costa Mesa, Calif., to witness a historic moment.

“This is seriously closure,” said Green. “I feel like a cloud has been lifted.”

“Justice for one is justice for all,” said Therese Serignese, now a Florida nurse.

Another woman, former model Janice Dickinson, looked at Cosby after he was sentenced. “Here’s the last laugh pal,” she told him.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Andrea Constand, left, the Canadian woman who was one of Bill Cosby’s key accusers, shares a smile with prosecutor Kristen Feden Tuesday after the comedian was sentenced to three to 10 years in state prison for sexual assault.
MATT SLOCUM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Andrea Constand, left, the Canadian woman who was one of Bill Cosby’s key accusers, shares a smile with prosecutor Kristen Feden Tuesday after the comedian was sentenced to three to 10 years in state prison for sexual assault.

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