The Atlantic

This Is Not the End of the Cosby Story

The comedian has been sentenced to three to 10 years in prison for the rape of Andrea Constand. But as she and her family eloquently insisted during this week’s hearing: The effects of his crime will live on.
Source: Gilbert Carrasquillo / Getty / Katie Martin / The Atlantic

In April, Bill Cosby stood trial: Andrea Constand, who had been one of Cosby’s mentees at Temple University, alleged that he had, during a visit she had made to his home in 2004, drugged her and then, while she was unable to fight back, raped her. Cosby was found guilty of three counts of aggravated indecent assault. It was a verdict that, after so long—after so many women spoke, describing the same incapacitate-and-assault pattern, only to be ignored; after an earlier mistrial that resulted from a hung jury; after years in which Cosby was inoculated by —brought a sense of closure. “The End of Bill Cosby,” CBS . “A Sad End to Bill Cosby’s Story,” a syndicated column .

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