Bill Cosby Admitted to Drugging Women

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Documents obtained Monday by the Associated Press reveal that Bill Cosby has on at least a couple of occasions given drugs to women he wanted to have *** with.

The documents, obtained by the AP from the deposition in a 2005 sexual abuse lawsuit filed by former Temple University employee Andrea Constand, reveal that he gave quaaludes to at least one woman and "other people."

During sworn testimony in the lawsuit accusing him of sexually assaulting Constand at his home in 2005, Cosby revealed he got seven quaalude prescriptions in the 1970s.

"When you got the quaaludes, was it in your mind that you were going to use these quaaludes for young women that you wanted to have *** with?" Constand's lawyer Dolores M. Troiani asked.

"Yes," Cosby answered.

The iconic comedian later admitted he had given Constand three half-pills of Benedryl, while the two other women who testified on Constand's behalf said they had knowingly been given quaaludes during their encounters with Cosby.

Cosby has been accused by over two dozen women of sexual misconduct, though he has never been criminally charged and most of the accusations are nullified by statutes of limitations.

 

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What does those drugs do actually?

Edit: "Controversy over the comedian Bill Cosby’s alleged repeated sexual assaults of women have reemerged after the Associated Press surfaced documents showing him admitting in a deposition to obtaining Quaaludes to give them to young women he wanted to have *** with.

But what are Quaaludes? The once massively popular sleep aid, sedative, and heavily abused recreational drug is unfamiliar to millennials and many in generation X, but very familiar to people who lived in urban centers through the 1970s and early 1980s. It has been highly illegal for three decades in the United States, and is almost completely unavailable there today.

Cosby admits to getting seven prescriptions for the drug in the deposition, which must have been before 1984, when the drug was banned nationwide, and put in the same classification for drug enforcement purposes as heroin. Throughout the 1970s, the drug was easily available and widely prescribed by physicians.

Formally, the drug’s name is methaqualone. It was originally synthesized in India in the 1950s as an antimalarial, but was later discovered to have sedative-hypnotic effects.

It was branded Quaaludes (after Maalox, also made by its initial manufacturer, and the phrase “quiet interlude”) in the United States. It first became popular as a sedative and sleeping pill because it was supposedly less addictive than the barbiturates commonly prescribed before it hit the market.

But by the 1970s, it had become massively popular as a recreational drug because it produces an intense, euphoric high after an initial 15-minute drowsy phase. Its illegal use was heavily associated with the disco scene. The DEA estimated in the early 1980s that as much as 90% of the world’s production of the drug went into the illegal drug trade.

Due to its sedative effect and strong interaction with alcohol, it has come up often in sexual assault allegations, including those against the film director Roman Polanski, and now against Cosby.

Abuse, hundreds of deaths from illegal use, and resulting bad publicity saw the one US maker of the drug halt production in 1983. Ronald Reagan signed an outright ban in 1984, making trafficking it far more dangerous.

The drug was still manufactured abroad, and intermittently available. But the DEA actually embarked on a campaign to convince manufacturers around the world to stop making it, and eventually it became nearly impossible to get in the United States.

The drugs that largely replaced Quaaludes as sedatives and sleep aids, benzodiazepines and their near cousins such as Ambien, have become the best-selling type of prescription drug in the world, despite abuse, dependency, and long-term use problems of their own."


.... So he basically "drugged" (was it unknowingly mixed in their drinks? or simply offered?) them with the stuff we saw in Wolf of Wall Street, but considering it is kinda a recreational drug at that time, the things more orgy than rapey.
 
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