One-Hour Special Scheduled To Air Includes Interviews With Bill Cosby Accusers

In this photo taken Nov. 6, 2014, entertainer Bill Cosby pauses during an interview about the upcoming exhibit, Conversations: African and African-American Artworks in Dialogue, at the Smithsonian's National Museum o... In this photo taken Nov. 6, 2014, entertainer Bill Cosby pauses during an interview about the upcoming exhibit, Conversations: African and African-American Artworks in Dialogue, at the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art in Washington. The Smithsonian Institution is mounting a major showcase of African-American art and African art together in a new exhibit featuring the extensive art collection of Bill and Camille Cosby. More than 60 rarely seen African-American artworks from the Cosby collection will join 100 pieces of African art at the National Museum of African Art. The exhibit “Conversations: African and African American Artworks in Dialogue,” opens Sunday and will be on view through early 2016. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) MORE LESS

A&E is scheduled to air a one-hour special, titled: “Cosby: The Women Speak” Thursday that will feature interviews with some of the women who have accused comedian Bill Cosby of sexual assault, according to Variety.

The program is slated to include more than a dozen women, including actress Louisa Moritz, publicist Joan Tarshis, and model Beverly Johnson, according to the report.

The program is scheduled to air Thursday at 9 p.m., according to the report.

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  1. It’s amazing how our normally docile investigative reporters can finally understand their function when sex is involved.

  2. Rape and drugged sex and women who were shamed for daring to accuse Dr. Huxtable of these crimes are arts and entertainment? I don’t think so.

  3. Poisoning the civil juror pool?

  4. Someone care to explain to me how, in our justice system, there is a statute of limitations for a sex crime(s) like this? It just seems…terribly…creepily bizarre.

  5. There are good reasons for statutes of limitations on crimes. Generally, only murder is exempt, but even that’s pretty tough to justify.

    Evidence is lost. Evidence is contaminated. Exculpatory evidence gets discarded (no, I do not keep my ATM receipts for 20 years, and I’ll wager the bank doesn’t keep the records that long either, so I can no longer prove that I was in another city when the crime was committed). Witnesses start “remembering” things that never happened. In short, the more time that elapses between an alleged crime and the trial, the more likely it is that justice will be miscarried.

    Granted, that runs against the grain. We think that no one should be let off the hook, just because a certain number of years have elapsed. But the risk of convicting innocent people goes way, way up otherwise.

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