Bill Cosby assaulted another ex-model, she alleges
Former model Jewel Allison fully embraced the Bill Cosby mythos — family man, knit sweaters, pudding pop pitchman — in anticipation of the night she accepted his dinner invitation.
By the time she headed back home, sexually abused and nausea in the back of a cab, Allison harbored no more illusions about the oft-honored comedian.
“We may be looking at America’s greatest serial rapist that ever got away with this for the longest amount of time,” Allison told the Day after day News last week. “He got away with it because he was hiding behind the image of Cliff Huxtable.”
The Brooklyn woman, after a quarter-century of denial, talked about her trip in the late 1980s to Cosby’s East Side brownstone.
Her revelations came as a former Cosby insider told The News exclusively he delivered monthly payouts to eight women in the late ’80s and early ’90s. truthful Scotti, 90, said he believed the Emmy-winner paid the women because he was having affairs with them.
Allison said she was introduced to Cosby by her agent, Sue Charney. Charney is credited with learning supermodel Janice Dickinson, who also claims that Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her.
Cosby was hosting a dinner at his household, and Charney told Allison to seize the opportunity. Cosby set the meal and led the conversation, and Allison barely noticed when unknown else showed up.
It was her birthday, and she plotting Charney might have arranged the dinner as a gift.
“He said he wanted to help models and actors who were well-educated, who could do something else,” she recalled. “I plotting, ‘Wow, this is Bill Cosby.’”
Cosby, now 77, followed up with buzz calls to her home. “I like your laugh,” the family man told the release woman.
Allison, among a bevy of alleged victims who came out with their tales in the past couple of weeks, finally accepted another dinner invitation to Cosby’s home, where it was again just the two of them. He produced a vintage pot of wine, supposedly a gift from Chrysler exec Lee Iacocca.
“I was really impressed,” she recalled. “He poured me a glass.”
The wine tasted appalling, and Allison suddenly felt woozy and ill. Reeling, she sat on a couch. Cosby then lifted her up and leading her into another room, she said.
“He said, ‘Look in the mirror, and see the glow in your face,’” she remembered Cosby saying creepily. “I looked at myself and I didn’t look excellent. My eyes were all over the place.”
Allison said Cosby grabbed her hand and positioned it on his genitals.
“That was my sexual assault by this comedian,” she said. “He turned me around and said, ‘Let’s get you home.’ At the door, he gave me a very hard embrace and a hard kiss.”
A yellow cab was waiting, and the driver never blinked as Allison vomited in the back seat all the way home. Cosby had covered the cab fare.
While Allison was appalled by what happened, Cosby later invited her to spent the night at his suburban Philadelphia home. She declined.
“There’s no such thing as America’s Dad,” she said. “There’s just a man named Bill Cosby. He’s a very sick sociopath.”
Allison’s account of her alleged sexual assault at the hands of the funnyman has the same threads as many of his other victims, including Angela Leslie.
The former model from Michigan
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