Cosby’s moralism did him in


That Bill Cosby will be forever known as a serial abuser of women wasn’t determined by the findings of a jury. It didn’t come down to evidence such as forensics, DNA, or even a blue dress. Instead his fate was sealed in the court of public opinion by an adjudication of his hypocrisy.

Beyond the legalese, that was the true predicate on which Judge Eduardo C. Robreno based his decision to unseal documents related to a civil suit filed against Cosby 10 years ago.

“This case, however, is not about defendant’s status as a public person by virtue of the exercise of his trade as a televised or comedic personality,” wrote the judge in his 25-page opinion. “Rather, defendant has donned the mantle of public moralist and mounted the proverbial electronic or print soap box to volunteer his views on, among other things, childrearing, family life, education, and crime.”

Citing precedent, Robreno concluded that Cosby had “thrust himself into the vortex of these public issues” and had “voluntarily narrowed the zone of privacy that he is entitled to claim.” As a result, the judge, who was appointed by President George H.W. Bush, lifted a temporary seal he had entered 10 years ago that had kept discovery motions and their supporting documents from public view.

Certain of those documents quoted from Cosby’s deposition, including an exchange in which he was asked by the attorney for accuser Andrea Constand whether he had obtained quaaludes to use for young women with whom he wanted to have sex. “Yes,” Cosby replied.

REVEALING FOOTNOTES

Listed in a footnote of Robreno’s opinion were examples of Cosby’s duality: the so-called pound-cake speech he delivered in 2004 at the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education; a 2013 interview he did with CNN’s Don Lemon; and impromptu remarks he made to Temple grads during their 2014 commencement.

In the first example, Cosby criticized African American parents who enable dangerous, promiscuous, and frivolous behavior in their children by not demanding their unwavering loyalty and respect.

Two years ago, in an interview with CNN’s Lemon, Cosby shared his views on rehabilitating juvenile delinquents, saying:

“I told these young fellows who were incarcerated, ‘If you don’t feel right, if you want to talk to somebody, go see the psychologist.’ Afterwards this woman came to me and said: ‘Thanks a lot. There’ll be a line all the way around for people to see me.’ But my point is: If you drug these people, and then you release them, and there’s no prescription for them to get to take to do the same thing, and they go back to the same place.”

Finally, at Temple University’s commencement ceremony for the Class of 2014, he accepted a spontaneous invitation to speak to grads and said:

“Look up Phillis Wheatley. Look up Frederick Douglass. No degrees, no papers. Just self-educated and seekers. Seekers. . . . As I have said over and over, those black people in the South picking cotton, 107 degrees Fahrenheit, 90 degrees humidity, who while picking cotton said to themselves, ‘Algebra is much easier than this.’ ’

That Robreno didn’t take kindly to Cosby telling others how to lead their lives while his own was so predatory is clear from his order.

Arguably, had Cosby stuck to comedy, his secret admission from a decade-old deposition would have remained hidden in the federal courthouse in Philadelphia.

Philadelphia Inquirer