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The verdict number got the headlines. What happened inside that Santa Monica courtroom tells the fuller story.
On March 23, 2026, a California civil jury found Bill Cosby liable for drugging and sexually assaulting Donna Motsinger in 1972, awarding her $59.25 million — $19.25 million in compensatory damages and $40 million in punitive damages after determining he acted with malice, oppression, or fraud under California law. It is the largest civil judgment Cosby has faced. His legal team has announced an appeal.
Motsinger, 84, alleged that Cosby cultivated her trust over multiple visits to The Trident restaurant in Sausalito while recording a stand-up album nearby, then invited her to his show, gave her wine and pills she believed to be aspirin, and assaulted her while she was incapacitated. She woke up at home with her clothes removed. She came forward anonymously as Jane Doe Number 8 in the 2005 Constand civil case. She waited another eighteen years before filing her own lawsuit — made possible only by California's 2022 law temporarily suspending the statute of limitations for older sexual assault claims.
At trial, the jury heard pattern testimony from Andrea Constand, Victoria Valentino, and Janice Baker Kinney — three additional accusers whose accounts of being given pills and losing consciousness closely mirrored Motsinger's allegations. Perhaps the most damaging evidence was Cosby's own videotaped deposition, in which he acknowledged obtaining Quaalude prescriptions, renewing them seven times, intending to offer the sedatives to women he was pursuing sexually, and stating he did not know whether a woman given a Quaalude from him could meaningfully consent.
Cosby, 88, did not testify. His attorney argued the assault allegations rested on speculation given Motsinger's acknowledged lack of direct memory. The jury disagreed. Whether Motsinger will collect on the judgment remains an open question as Cosby disputes estimates of his net worth and litigation continues.
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This is Hidden Killers with Tony Brusky.
Here now, Tony Brusky.
In 1972, Bill Cosby was recording a stand-up comedy album in the San Francisco Bay Area,
a live performance at the Circle Star Theatre in San Carlos, California. The album,
it would go on to be one of his best sellers, another notch in the career.
That was already making him one of the most beloved entertainers in America at the time.
That same night, that exact same night, a woman named Donna Motsinger woke up alone in her home
with her clothes gone, knowing she'd been drugged and assaulted by the man who would just put her
in a limousine a few hours earlier. One night, two things happened. One became a cultural artifact
that people bought, played in their living rooms, and laughed at four years. Some still do.
The other became a secret, Donna Motsinger carried for over 50 years.
Until a jury in Santa Monica, California finally heard it.
And order Bill Cosby to pay her $59.25 million.
Let's talk about how we got here, because the path is as important as the destination.
And as we do, your thoughts in the comment section on Substack and YouTube links are in the
description. Donna Motsinger was in her early 30s in 1972. She was working as a server at the
Trident, a well-known restaurant in Sossolito, California. She had a nine-year-old son. She was
living her life. Bill Cosby started coming into that restaurant regularly while he was in town
for his recording sessions, not once, not twice. He came back repeatedly over the course of that
week. He was friendly, charming. He's Bill Cosby. Of course he was. That's the whole point.
He eventually invited her to attend his comedy show. He sent a limousine to pick her up.
I wouldn't pause on that for a second. Excuse me, because the details, if how Cosby
allegedly operated, matter a great deal to understanding what he did and why so many women never
said anything. This was an impulsive. This was an accidental. It took time, repeated contact,
and deliberate effect to build enough familiarity than an invitation like that felt normal, safe,
even. And once Donna Motsinger was in that car, according to her testimony, in the lawsuit filed
in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Cosby gave her a glass of wine and two pills. She believed
were aspirin. You know, like every great first date starts here. Have some pills.
She started feeling sick backstage. She went in and on a consciousness, the last thing she
remembered were flashes of light. She woke up at home, clothes gone underwear on. She knew what
had happened. And she said nothing for decades. Here's where the story becomes about more than one
woman because it was never about just one woman. At least 60 women have come forward over the years
of the allegations against Bill Cosby. Sixty. And when you read through their accounts,
a pattern emerges that's almost mechanically consistent, access cultivated through charm
and celebrity. Alcohol introduced, pills described as something innocuous, consciousness lost,
assault occurred while the woman was incapacitated. The specifics changed. The structure
doesn't. And Motsinger's trial to other accusers testified to establish exactly that pattern. One
of them was Victoria Valentina, a former Playboy model. Now 82 years old. She says that in 1969,
she met Cosby at a restaurant while she was in the middle of grieving her six-year-old son had
recently drowned. She was in that kind of pain. The kind that leaves a person raw and unguarded.
And she says that is when Cosby convinced her to swallow two pills. He then drove her to a nearby
office and assaulted her. Well, she was too immobilized to fight back. That's the accusation.
I mean, just take a second with that. She was bearing her child. And according to her testimony,
that's when he moved in. It's doing picture page on the side, picture page, picture page,
doing the Cosby kids, doing the albums. What other shows were going on at that time? He's a
celebrity. He is someone that America is loving. He's breaking barriers at this moment in time.
He is not a man that you're going to want to try and pull down because people are going to call
you crazy and horrible. And what are you doing? This man is moving mountains. How dare you say some
story like that? He's this lovable, wonderful character. And look, he's going to feel so hurt.
And this is how they are able to do it. This is how he's able to pull off this facade forever.
This is a man who was so calculated in the way that he did things of managing his image
and his facade as this friendly, lovable, I am the most harmless, safe person you could possibly
imagine. It wasn't just sitcoms where he's the dad. It wasn't just comedy albums where he's
the lovable friend that is hilarious. He also went into children's television.
Children's books. I got one right here. This from 1999. He's marketing himself all the way into
the 2000s. Still, as I knew it, I lived this era. But if you didn't, this man had decades of
pretending to be something he wasn't all the way down to children's books. This is a series
called Little Bill, Books for Beginning Raiders. And if you're reading the title,
you're exactly right. It says what it says, Bill Cosby, the worst day of my life.
Scholastic put it out. My future mother-in-law picked this up the other day at a thrift store.
She knew it was going to make me go, oh my God.
But I mean, this is how insidious he was with his image.
How could the man who is making children's literature, he's the friendly,
there isn't, there is not in current American culture.
A single human being, I would say, that has the image or the reputation that Bill Cosby had in
the 1980s and 90s. I can't think of one. There's plenty of people who are respected,
but not as well-known as well-respected and revered, I would say. Reveared is a word that describes
how Bill Cosby was looked at. I can't think of anybody that I can think of plenty of people who
kind of fit that mold, but none who were at the level to which he was at one period in time.
We're just the insinuation that he would have done something like that would just be met with
scoffs. That's the craziest thing I've ever heard in my life. No way. Here, let's go to the book
mobile and get a book. Oh, you want to get to Bill Cosby? One, isn't he funny? Look at that.
This is a great book. I mean, this is, it was a machine. It was a machine that manufactured
an image that everybody believed that allowed him to be the biggest monster in the room.
This woman is literally bearing her child.
And in Bill's mind, fresh meat. She's vulnerable. This will be easy. That's how he's thinking.
That's a predator's think. You look for the vulnerable, the most influential,
and they go for that. Can we become a master at it? He of course denies his allegations, says he's
going to fight them. And I'm sure he will fight all of this shit until the day he's dead, which I'm
sure is not far away. And eventually, he'll be up to an estate to settle the shit and he'll be
long gone. But we'll still be able to learn about the worst day of his life, right?
I wonder what the worst day of his life is actually about.
We get toothpaste on his nose. I mean, it's a kid's book. So it looks like he's putting on
clothes he doesn't like wearing and misses the busts or something. But surprisingly,
there's not accusations of asmiss conduct in this book. The worst day of Bill's life,
60 women came after me today and accused me of drugging them. And yeah, that's not in this
elastic version of the book. Of course, the thing we get from everybody, why didn't these
women say something sooner? That question gets asked a lot and it always irritates the living
shit out of me. And every victim who's ever existed because the answer is right in front of us.
This was Bill Cosby by 1972. He was already a household name already beloved already powerful.
Donna Motsinger was a restaurant server, a woman who was in her 30s with a nine year old son.
Who do you think people were going to believe? What room did a woman have in 1972 to walk into a
police station and accuse one of America's most beloved entertainers of drugging and assaulting her?
The answer is none. And Cosby understood that, built on it, counted on it,
allegedly. Let's just assume there were allegedly ends every sentence here, so I have to say it
every goddamn time, okay? What makes this case even harder to sit with is what came out during
the trial. In closing arguments, Motsinger's attorney played excerpts from a videotape deposition
in which Cosby under oath acknowledged obtaining a prescription for quay ludes at a poker game with
a physician, huh? How nice. He renewed that prescription seven times. He stated that his intention
and obtaining them was to give the drug to women he was pursuing sexually. This is just how he did
things. I don't think he even thought anything was wrong with it. I think Bill honestly is more
upset that the game changed on him. At the game he was playing, that the society around him,
which allowed him to play it, I think he's mad all of that changed. And the perception changed,
and the reality changed, and he didn't change. And he's wondering why now, because he thought,
I'm playing by the rules of the game. I got all this power. I'm doing this. This is
because now I'm bad for this. Yes, you are, Bill, because you had a moral failure.
Not every, not every male, although we're learning, unfortunately, I think a giant percentage,
a higher percentage than not from this period of time gave into those options.
By the way, to them, it was presented as options. I don't think a lot of these,
this is no way excusing it, but I'm just telling you the mindset at the time. Go watch mad men,
go watch anything of the era. It does not excuse it, but if you're trying to understand the context
to which these people operated in, they didn't think anything was wrong with their activity.
And it was being backed up in their own groups and their own, you know, you have the
atmosphere today. I mean, there was a version of that back then, rich, powerful men together at a bar,
basically saying, yeah, we can do this. And there wasn't anybody. There wasn't, there wasn't
necessarily advocacy groups or anywhere near the level that we have today standing up and speaking
out going, this is horrible. This is insane. We can't do this. There was a 1,000% different atmosphere.
And this shit went well on to the 80s, into the 90s. I mean, it slowly changed.
But at the time when this shit was going down,
it almost feels like a different species of human beings to a certain extent.
What was considered acceptable behavior or boys will be boys or mentally whatever the
fuck you want to say, whatever stupid platitude there is. It literally kind of started and ended
right there. I know it's like, that's horrible. It's wrong. You're right. It is. It's horrible,
but it is where it was. And I'm not saying it like that's just the way it is. Some things will
never change. That's just the way it is. Now, I'm saying that's the way it was.
And he can't change history. We can all scream and we can say, yeah, we sure should have been
and thank God, you know, things have changed. And they have. Is it perfect? No. But are we
in 1972? No. We're not in 1972 anymore. Thank God.
But if you're really trying to get back behind
how these people are thinking, because I don't think they're necessarily sitting there,
you know, around a cauldron. How can we do this today? I just, this is how
and what's really shocking about it is Bill Cosby was a powerful man. He had
celebrity. He had a, you know, on the surface, a very powerful and positive personality.
Such as America's dad. People loved him. Why he felt he needed to drug women to begin with.
It's like kind of insane out of the gate. It's like, you don't need any, you have the magic of you
of people wanting to be near you. People wanting to have relationships with you.
Why are you drugging people and taking their autonomy, their control away?
I think the answer that ultimately comes down to, well, he liked control. He liked absolute control.
But it really is insane, isn't it? When you really, if you really look like why,
like this, this just, like if you want to be a celebrity and go out and sleep with a bunch of people,
he had the power to do it without drugs, without drugging anyone.
But somehow he felt like that was, that was required.
His story, you know, it could have been so different. It could have been, yeah, he was,
he slept around a lot, and a lot of people have stories of, yes, I had an affair with Bill Cosby
back then. And people could look back at as they look back on, on prior relationships that
didn't involve coercive control. I mean, I think we can all, we all have lives if we've lived
a little bit. We can all look back on relationships, small, short, one-night stands, whatever you
want to say, and that we're not coercively controlled. Hopefully most of us have never lived a life
like that and go, yeah, you know, like, yeah, that was, it was sort of fair. It was, I don't know,
fair, but it was, it was, it was a relationship. It was a, whatever you want to call it, you know,
in a positive way where it's positive for both partners.
It could have been that. It could have been, look back on his, well, when I was younger, yes,
yes, we had our moments together and in both parties can look back going, yes, that happened.
And, and it was lovely in both parties, but it's like, no, he drugged her, like, yep, he drugged
me and it was horrible. Like, it didn't have to be that. Why? Why? Why are you getting pushed, like, what the
I just,
creating problems where there doesn't need to be problems, really.
I mean, there's a lot that you can go into, I guess, into the psychology of Bill Cosby.
Is it, is it, was he that insecure? Was he that?
Was he lacking that much, for a man who exuded so much confidence? Was he that
lacking confidence in that part of his life and in his sexual world that he thought the only
way to do that was by having a drug to zombie-like partner? I mean, is that
who the hell does that? I mean, I know the answer to it, like, rapists and Bill Cosby,
allegedly, but I mean, I'm trying to wrap my mind around something. I don't think I'll have
a really, really, truly wrap it around because I think either you think that way or you don't.
And so Bill gets the drugs at the party or he gets the prescription for the drugs and he
goes for an actual pharmacy to fill the prescription. And then when asked whether a woman who
received a quailude from him was capable of giving consent, he said he did not know, he simply
did not know. So Bill, it appears you know what you're doing. So you're tearing pretty well.
That's not an allegation from a plaintiff that's not a claim from a prosecutor. That's Bill Cosby
on tape in his own words. I wasn't a best-selling album. It was a deposition explaining what he was
doing with sedatives who he intended to give them to an acknowledging that he never stopped to
consider whether those women could meaningfully agree to anything. He admits to doing this stuff.
The thing is now when women come out and accuse him in court, he'll just deny he doesn't want to
give them money out. But he's already admitted like this is his modality. This is what he does.
So here's a person who says you did this to them, Bill.
Picture page, picture page.
Look up, picture page, if you're not right, I'm talking about.
Done a modcing or didn't wait until 2023 to try to hold Bill Cosby accountable. That part
of the story deserves to be said out loud. Back in 2005, when Andrea Constran filed a civil
lawsuit against Cosby for a separate alleged assault, more than a dozen women agreed to come
forward as witnesses. Monsinger was one of them. She appeared in those proceedings anonymously
listed in court documents as Jane Doe number eight. She was prepared to go through this publicly
on record almost 20 years ago. Constran ultimately reached a private settlement. The case resolved
quietly and Cosby walked. Then in 2018, he was criminally convicted in Pennsylvania,
three counts of aggravated indecent assault against Constran.
Based largely on deposition testimony and given in her civil case under what he believed
was an agreement with prosecutors that shielded him from criminal charges.
This is how Bill went away. And also how he got out. He was sentenced to three to ten years in
state prison. He served nearly three years. And in 2021, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court threw
out the conviction not because new evidence emerged, not because the jury got it wrong,
because the court found that Cosby had testified in the constant civil case after a prior
prosecutor led him to believe he had immunity from criminal prosecution and that using his own
testimony against him in a subsequent criminal trial was a constitutional violation.
The procedural agreement that had been designed to coax testimony out of him became the mechanism
that also set him free. Yes, Kubrickson done only in America. He walked out of that prison in
June of 2021. That is the system working exactly as designed and still producing an outcome that
fell to a lot of people like a punch in the stomach because it was. Donna Monsinger filed her lawsuit
in 2023. She was 84 years old. The case was made possible by a California law assigned by
Governor Gavin Newsom in 2022 that temporarily suspended the statute of limitations for older
s assault civil claims, creating a look back window that allowed accusers to bring suits that would
otherwise have been permanently time barred. Botsinger's case moved through the California court
system in roughly two and a half years from filing the verdict that is fast by any measure.
The trial lasted nearly two weeks in Santa Monica, the same courthouse where in 2022,
fellow accuser Judy Houth won a civil verdict against Cosby for an alleged assault at the Playboy
Mansion in 1975 when she was 16 years old. Cosby appealed that verdict then in January of this
year, just two months before this trial concluded he quietly withdrew that appeal. And Monsinger's trial
Cosby now 88 legally blind and reportedly insignificant financial decline did not testify. He is not
testified on his own defense in any of these proceedings. Criminal or civil is Attorney Jennifer
Bojene argued that the case rested on speculation. She pointed out that Monsinger acknowledged having
no direct memory of the assault itself against the malice suppression or fraud filing. Bojene argued
against punitive damages by noting that her client is an elderly homebound man who cannot leave
his house. The jury was not moved. They found Cosby libel for s assault and s battery of an
intoxicated person and they awarded Monsinger 17.5 million for past emotional suffering and 1.75
million for future suffering. Then in an afternoon session, they found that he had acted with
malice, suppression or fraud. The legal threshold required in California for punitive damages and
added 40 million dollars total 59.25 million dollars. Well, Donna Monsinger ever see that money
and expert witness estimated Cosby's net worth and approximately 128 million dollars. Cosby
disputes that figure in his own deposition of this case. He described his finances as having
gone down like a submarine with no murder reports indicate he has been selling off properties to
meet his bills. The appeal has already been announced to the gap between what a jury awards
and what a plaintiff actually collects is real and it is often significant. But Donna Monsinger
said something after the verdict that I think matters more than the number. The verdict is not
just about me. It's about finally being heard and holding Mr. Cosby accountable. I've carried the
weight of what happened to me for more than 50 years. It never goes away. Today, a jury saw the truth
and held him accountable and that means everything. She already tried his Jane Doe number eight in 2005,
20 years ago. She watched it go nowhere. She watched him get convicted in 2018 and walked
free in 2021 on a technicality born from his own legal strategy and then at 84 years old,
she walked into a Santa Monica courthouse and did it again. The criminal system gave Bill Cosby
his freedom back. Not because he proved he didn't do it, but because a prosecutor made a promise
two decades ago that the next prosecutor decided to ignore the civil system using a law that didn't
exist until three years ago. Just held him accountable to the tune of nearly 60 million dollars.
California had to rewrite its laws to get there. An 84 year old woman had to walk into a courtroom
and testify, but the worst night of her life, a night that 54 years ago also produced a best-selling
comedy album. She already tried once. She tried again. Victoria Valentino, who is grieving a drowned
child when she says he came for her and the woman who was Jane Doe number eight for 20 years before
she finally had a name on a verdict. If it took all of that, the change law more than a half a century.
Women in their 80s willing to go through it again, the question worth sitting with is this,
how many others are still waiting and how many gave up long before the law caught up.
Your thoughts on the comments section on sub-stack and YouTube. We will continue our conversation
there. Be sure to press subscribe wherever you get podcasts. As you know, it's any of our
reporting of this to the many cases we follow for you right here. Just search hidden killers wherever
you get podcasts, an Apple podcast, Spotify, iHeart, wherever it may be, and take us with you on the go.
We'll continue the conversation in comments. Until then, I'm Tony Versky. We'll talk again real soon.
This case and others, then press subscribe now and don't miss a moment of true crime coverage
from Tony Brusky and the Hidden Killers Podcast.
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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary