http://www.cbsnews.com/news/bill-cosbys-accusers-tell-their-stories/
"I remember him saying, 'Are you okay, Bernard?' And then, I must have passed out again in the tub naked, I'm totally naked, I don't know how I got into the tub. So I imagine he must have either carried me or lifted me or dragged me, I don't know."
"Did you think about going to the police?" Smith asked.
"Yes, I told Bill Cosby I would call the police. I said I would call the police, and he threatened me that if I called the police that he -- the minute that I come back from the police -- would go the police and file a police report against me for false accusation and defamation. 'And who are they going to believe, Bernard? You or me?'"
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/bill-cosbys-accusers-tell-their-stories/2/
"There are many who just don't want to believe it, they can't believe it, they don't want to see that their hero does something like this. But 50 women have accused him of rape, and that's sort of hard to get over and to overlook," said Hendricks. "And if only one of them is telling the truth, then that means that he's a rapist."
Some of those women are working together now to change statute of limitations laws, if not for them, then for future victims of assault.
And that could be Bill Cosby's real legacy.
Smith asked, "Could it be that Bill Cosby goes to his grave with all of this still going on?"
Professor Levenson replied, "I think one of the strategies here is to say to Bill Cosby, 'You will never have peace. For the rest of your life we will be pursuing you. We may not win at every turn, but we will be there.'"