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Bill Cosby

‘It’s all a set up’: Cosby’s prison interview

Source: News Corp Australia Network:
November 25, 2019 at 12:24
Actor and comedian Bill Cosby has insisted he was set up. Picture: David Maialetti-Pool/Getty Images.Source:Getty Images
Actor and comedian Bill Cosby has insisted he was set up. Picture: David Maialetti-Pool/Getty Images.Source:Getty Images

Disgraced TV star Bill Cosby has spoken out in his first interview from prison after being convicted for drugging a woman and sexually assaulting her.

In his first interview behind bars, Bill Cosby remained defiant about the sex assault that put him in prison, insisting that he’s not guilty and that the jurors were “impostors”.

The 82-year-old disgraced comedian said Monday he will never admit wrongdoing — even if it could help win him parole from SCI Phoenix near Philadelphia, where he’s serving up to 10 years for drugging and molesting Andrea Constand in 2004, BlackPressUSA.com reported.

“When I come up for parole, they’re not going to hear me say that I have remorse,” Cosby told the outlet in a series of prison phone calls, adding that he anticipates serving his full sentence.
 

Bill Cosby departs the Montgomery County Courthouse on the first day of sentencing in his sexual assault trial on September 24, 2018 in Norristown, Pennsylvania. Picture: Mark Makela/Getty Images.
Bill Cosby departs the Montgomery County Courthouse on the first day of sentencing in his sexual assault trial on September 24, 2018 in Norristown, Pennsylvania.
Picture: Mark Makela/Getty Images.Source:Getty Images

 


Bill Cosby was found guilty of drugging and molesting Andrea Constand, a former university basketball administrator. Picture: Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP.
Bill Cosby was found guilty of drugging and molesting Andrea Constand, a former university basketball administrator.
Picture: Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP.Source:AFP

 

The former “The Cosby Show” star insisted that his trial was unjust and that jurors were prepared to convict him before the proceedings got underway.

“It’s all a set-up. That whole jury thing. They were impostors,” Cosby said, noting that one juror was overheard saying before the trial that, “he’s guilty, we can all go home now.”

Cosby — who refers to his prison cell as his “penthouse” — said he now spends his time in lockup lecturing fellow inmates during Saturday sessions with Mann Up, a prison reform program.

“I go into my penthouse and lay down and start to think about how I can relay a message and give it on Saturdays so that they would hear it and feel it,” Cosby said.

This article originally appeared in the New York Post and was republished here with permission.

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