Bill Cosby Sexual Assault: Cosby's Full Testimony Requested For Release

The plaintiff accusing Bill Cosby for drugging women for sex may ask the judge to unseal the rest of the 77-year-old comedian's testimonies in 2005, in a sexual assault lawsuit filed by 13 women.

CNN reports Cosby was publicly accused by dozens of women for sexually assaulting them with the use of the "powerful sedative methaqualone," Quaalude, which he then admitted.

The release of initial court documents was granted by U.S. District Judge Eduardo C. Robreno to The Associated Press, who requested to unseal Cosby's testimonies ten years ago on Monday.

Cosby was documented answering questions from Dolores Troiani, the plaintiff Andrea Constand's attorney. Constand was one of the more than a dozen women who publicly accused Cosby of sexual assault.

Troiani asked, "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 sex with?"

"Yes," Cosby answered.

Cosby's attorney then objected and advised him not to answer when he was asked if he ever gave "any of those young women the Quaaludes without their knowledge".

"She meets me back stage. I give her Quaaludes. We then have sex," Cosby admitted in the document, citing one encounter with a young woman in Las Vegas in the 1970's.

Although Cosby admitted acquiring the prescribed drugs to sedate young women for sex, he did not specifically admit drugging those who have filed the lawsuit against him.

Acording to NBC, Troiani is now collecting permissions from other 13 women who signed the lawsuit in 2005 to unseal the full deposition.

Trying to acquire Cosby's reaction with regards to the release of the said documents, which his lawyers said would be "terribly embarrassing," the comedian's publicist for many years, David Brokaw told CNN that they have "no plans to issue a statement."

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