Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt said his client expected to be turned down. “We knew he was going to be rejected. He called me and told me that if he didn’t take the course, he would be denied," He has maintained his innocence from the beginning.”
Although the
Pennsylvania Parole Board has turned down comedian Bill Cosby's petition to be
released from a 10-year prison sentence for aggravated indecent assault, citing
his refusal to participate in a therapy program for sexually violent predators.
Laura
Treaster, a spokeswoman for the state parole board, confirmed the decision,
which was made on May 11 and first reported on Thursday by Nicole Weisensee
Egan, author of the book "Chasing Cosby," on her Facebook page.
Cosby, now
83, would have become eligible for parole on Sept. 25 after completing the
three-year minimum term of his sentence. He was sentenced to 3 to 10 years in
prison and designated a sexually violent predator on September 25, 2018, after
being convicted earlier in the year of the rape of Andrea Constand, his former
friend at Temple University, in 2004.
The
once-beloved comedian known as “America’s Dad” has been serving his sentence in
the State Correctional Institution at Phoenix, a suburb in Philadelphia.
Treaster said
the board would not consider Cosby for parole again unless he completes the
sexual violent predator therapy. He must also overcome a recommendation against
parole from the state Department of Corrections and maintain a clear conduct
record. Cosby was also told to develop “parole release plan.”
She said the
reasons for the negative recommendation by the Corrections Department, and
Cosby’s prison conduct record, are not public information.
Cosby had a
hearing before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in December on his appeal of his
conviction. The court has not yet ruled, and there is rarely any advance
notice.
Wyatt said
Cosby is doing as well in prison as can be expected.
“He’s
hopeful,” Wyatt said of the Supreme Court appeal. “He’s cool as a cucumber."
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