Bill Cosby’s Alleged Admission About Quaaludes
Under oath, Bill Cosby reportedly stated that he got a prescription for recreational quaaludes to give to women for sexual encounters.
This revelation emerged from a sealed deposition linked to a lawsuit from accuser Donna Motsinger, as detailed in newly filed legal documents. Cosby is said to have confessed to refilling this prescription seven times, claiming it was provided by OBGYN Dr. Leroy Amar during a poker game at his Los Angeles home prior to 1972.
Interestingly, Amar lost his California medical license in 1979. Motsinger has accused Cosby of drugging and raping her in 1972.
The documents reported that Cosby claimed he obtained the prescription specifically to give the pills to women to facilitate sexual relations. Furthermore, he stated he never used the pills himself.
Motsinger’s lawsuit alleges that Cosby handed her a pill she believed to be an aspirin. She reported feeling increasingly disoriented after taking it, eventually regaining consciousness the following day at her home, wearing only her underwear. The new legal filings specify that the quaaludes in question were described as white, round pills.
Cosby served three years in prison for aggravated indecent assault before his release in June 2021, when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court overturned his conviction. He is now seeking to have Motsinger’s lawsuit dismissed, as reported.





