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Timeline: Cosby sex scandal a decade in the making

Bill Cosby, pictured in December 2005 (left) and in November 2014. Getty Images

The sexual assault allegations that recently resurfaced against Bill Cosby first became public in 2005 when a former employee of his alma mater, Temple University, claimed he had drugged and abused her a year earlier at his suburban Philadelphia home.

Here’s how the controversy over the allegations, some dating to the 1960s, has unfolded since then:

Andrea Constand tells police in her native Ontario on Jan. 13, 2005, that Cosby assaulted her a year earlier at his mansion in Cheltenham, Pennsylvania. She said he invited her home after a restaurant dinner, gave her pills for stress and tension, then helped her to a sofa when she became dizzy and sick. She recalled him touching her breast and placing her hand on his penis, and said she awoke with her clothing in disarray and bra undone. She said she drove herself home and decided not to report to police what happened due to Cosby’s fame and her position as a Temple women’s basketball administrator. Instead, she said she contacted a lawyer who deals with sexual assaults.

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Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce L. Castor Jr. decides after a monthlong investigation that there’s not enough “credible and admissible evidence,” a year after the alleged crime, to prove any charges. Castor adds that he won’t divulge details to avoid tainting a possible civil action by Constand, and says “Much exists in this investigation that could be used to portray persons on both sides of the issue in a less than flattering light.”

Cosby’s lawyer says the comedian “looks forward to moving on with his life,” and Cosby makes his only published comments to date about these allegations, telling the National Enquirer that “I am not going to give in to people who try to exploit me because of my celebrity status.”

Constand then sues Cosby alleging battery, assault, infliction of emotional distress, defamation and invasion of privacy. She makes the same allegations cited in the summary of her complaint to Canadian police, but also alleges that he “digitally penetrated her.” Her suit eventually names nine women – Tamara Green and eight Jane Does – as witnesses who would testify about prior sexual assaults.

READ MORE: The latest news on Bill Cosby

Tamara Green appears on NBC’s Today show on Feb. 10, 2005, saying that Constand’s allegation about being drugged and assaulted compelled her to speak publicly about an encounter she said she had with Cosby in the 1970s. She says Cosby groped and fondled her at her Los Angeles apartment after immobilizing her with what he said was cold medicine. Cosby’s lawyer calls the allegations “absolutely false,” and says Cosby did not even recognize her name.

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Beth Ferrier, identified as Jane Doe No. 5, goes public on June 23, 2005, alleging that as a model in New York in 1984, she met Cosby and they had a brief affair. She claims Cosby drugged her coffee during an encounter in Denver and she woke up hours later in the backseat of her car with her clothes disheveled.

Janice Dickinson, in a June 6, 2006, radio interview with Howard Stern, describes Cosby as a “bad guy” and says he “preys on women.” She says her publishing company forced her to downplay passages in a 2002 memoir about an alleged encounter the model and comedian had 20 years earlier. The book says Cosby was upset when she declined to go to his hotel room, saying “After all I’ve done for you, that’s what I get?”

Barbara Bowman is named in a June 9, 2006, Philadelphia magazine report as one of the Jane Does giving depositions or statements in support of Constand’s lawsuit. Constand and Cosby settle their claims out of court for an undisclosed sum that November, but it doesn’t stop People magazine from publishing a detailed account of Bowman’s allegations a month later. Bowman tells People that Cosby won her trust as an 18-year-old aspiring actress in 1985 and drugged and assaulted her multiple times in Reno, Nevada and Atlantic City, New Jersey.

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Eight years pass.

In January 2014, The New York Times publishes an open letter by Dylan Farrow accusing another celebrity – her stepfather, Woody Allen – of abusing her as a child. Newsweek magazine follows in February, reviving the allegations from the one-time “Jane Does,” publishing interviews in February with Green and Bowman.

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Comedian Hannibal Buress makes “you rape women, Bill Cosby” a laugh line in his standup routine. Cosby’s planned return to television begins to implode.

Bowman then writes in The Washington Post that “Cosby had drugged and raped me, too.” Her Nov. 13 essay questions why it took a male comedian’s comments to create the public outcry.

Cosby’s scheduled appearances on The Queen Latifah Show and Late Show With David Letterman are canceled.

BELOW: Watch a report on Bill Cosby’s refusal to answer a question about the allegations on NPR.

Joan Tarshis comes forward on Nov. 16, alleging that Cosby drugged and assaulted her in 1969, when she was 19. She says Cosby forced her to perform oral sex on him during one encounter, and then drugged and raped her in another. Cosby’s lawyer issues a blanket denial of “decade-old, discredited allegations,” stating that “the fact that they are being repeated does not make them true.” The next day, Cosby’s lawyer clarifies that his statement does not apply to Constand.

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Dickinson then reappears, telling ET on Nov. 18 that Cosby sexually assaulted her in 1982. She says Cosby gave her red wine and a pill in a Lake Tahoe, California, hotel room. Dickinson says she wrote about the alleged assault in a draft of her 2002 autobiography, No Lifeguard on Duty: The Accidental Life of the World’s First Supermodel, but that Cosby and his lawyers pressured her and the publisher to remove the claim.

Netflix indefinitely postpones the Nov. 27 premiere of a Cosby comedy special, Bill Cosby 77. NBC then scraps a Cosby comedy series under development, and TV Land stops airing reruns of The Cosby Show.

Castor – the prosecutor who decided not to bring charges in 2005 – reveals that Cosby had been evasive during his investigation. “I think when he said that he didn’t do anything improper or illegal, I thought then he was lying and I still do,” he tells The Associated Press. But Castor says there was not enough evidence to prove anything.

Therese Serignese, named in documents as a “Jane Doe,” comes forward as Cosby’s 7th named accuser, alleging that he drugged and assaulted her in 1976 when she was 19. The same day, Nov. 20, the AP releases video from a Nov. 6 interview with Cosby and his wife, Camille, when they were being asked about their decision to loan paintings and other artworks to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C. When asked about the sex allegations resurfacing, Cosby refuses to discuss them. Later, with a microphone still attached and the camera rolling, he questions the news organization’s integrity for raising the issue and says, “I would appreciate if it was scuttled.”

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BELOW: Watch Bill Cosby respond to a question about the scandal in a Nov. 6, 2014 interview with the Associated Press.

Renita Chaney Hill, 47, tells Pittsburgh’s KDKA she met Cosby in the ’80s when she was a 15-year-old model and aspiring actress.

She alleges that on a number of occasions, she was drugged by the TV star. Hill says she doesn’t know if she was raped.

“It just felt weird to me, and I remember being in high school saying to him, ‘I’ll come see you, but I don’t want to drink because it makes me feel funny,’” Hill says. “And he would tell me that if I didn’t drink, I couldn’t come see him.”

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BELOW: Watch Renita Chaney Hill talk about her memories of Cosby.

On Nov. 20, former Law & Order: SVU actress Michelle Hurd comes forward to allege Cosby acted “inappropriately” with her when she worked as a stand-in on The Cosby Show.

“It started innocently, lunch in his dressing room, daily, then onto weird acting exercises were he would move his hands up and down my body,” she claims. “I was instructed to NEVER tell anyone what we did together.”

In an article published Nov. 21, actress Angela Leslie tells the New York Daily News about an alleged encounter with Cosby in a hotel room in 1992.

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“The main thing I want is for people to know him for who he really is,” she told the Daily News. “He’s not this dad of America.”

Cosby performs that night in Melbourne, Florida.

The 2,000-seat theatre beefed up security and announcements before Cosby took the stage warned a disturbance was possible – radio hosts had even offered cash and prizes to anyone who made it happen. Reporters swarmed the venue. But, in the end, just one protester stood outside, holding a sign that read, “Rape is no joke.”

“I know people are tired of me not saying anything, but a guy doesn’t have to answer to innuendos,” Cosby told the Florida Today newspaper before the show. “People should fact check.”

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On Nov. 21, Cosby’s lawyer, Martin Singer, issues a statement to the media.

It reads:

“The new, never-before-heard claims from women who have come forward in the past two weeks with unsubstantiated, fantastical stories about things they say occurred 30, 40, or even 50 years ago have escalated far past the point of absurdity.

These brand new claims about alleged decades-old events are becoming increasingly ridiculous, and it is completely illogical that so many people would have said nothing, done nothing, and made no reports to law enforcement or asserted civil claims if they thought they had been assaulted over a span of so many years.

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Lawsuits are filed against people in the public eye every day. There has never been a shortage of lawyers willing to represent people with claims against rich, powerful men, so it makes no sense that not one of these new women who just came forward for the first time now ever asserted a legal claim back at the time they allege they had been sexually assaulted.

This situation is an unprecedented example of the media’s breakneck rush to run stories without any corroboration or adherence to traditional journalistic standards. Over and over again, we have refuted these new unsubstantiated stories with documentary evidence, only to have a new uncorroborated story crop up out of the woodwork. When will it end?

It is long past time for this media vilification of Mr. Cosby to stop.”

Frank Scotti tells the New York Daily News he regularly sent payments to women on behalf of Bill Cosby. He alleges the women were being paid off by the comedian.

Singer dismissed Scotti’s comments as “pure speculation.”

BELOW: Watch a report on Frank Scotti’s allegations.

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On Nov. 24, Foxwoods Resort Casino says it has indefinitely postponed Bill Cosby’s concert appearance that was scheduled for January.

The announcement by the Connecticut resort adds to several cancellations last week for the embattled comedian.

No reason was given by Foxwoods for postponing the Jan. 31 performance.

Cosby has never been charged in connection with any of the allegations.

– with files by Global News

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