The lawsuit, filed by Kathrine McKee, revolved
around a letter that an attorney for Cosby sent New York's Daily
News in 2014 as a wave of women was coming forward to accuse the
comedian of a string of sexual assaults dating back to the
1960s.
The statute of limitations on the alleged crimes had long
expired, leading some accusers to pursue civil lawsuits, such as
McKee's. The lawsuits and accusations by dozens of women
shattered the family-friendly reputation Cosby built in a career
highlighted by his role in the 1980s television hit "The Cosby
Show."
Cosby, 80, has denied wrongdoing, saying any encounters with his
accusers were consensual. He is awaiting an April retrial in
Pennsylvania on charges he sexually assaulted a former
basketball coach at his alma mater, Temple University.
McKee argued in her suit that the attorney's letter to the
newspaper called her a liar by saying the article was
"defamatory, characterizing her claims as "wild" and suggesting
she had a criminal record.
But the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston stood by a
lower-court ruling that the entertainer could not be sued over
the letter.
The decision found that McKee had made herself a public figure
by wading into the controversy with Cosby, rejecting her claim
that her dispute with the entertainer was a private one. As a
public figure, McKee would have to prove that Cosby acted with
malice in his response.
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"The web of sexual assault allegations implicating Cosby, an
internationally renowned comedian commonly referred to as 'America's
Dad,' constitutes a public controversy," U.S. Circuit Judge Sandra
Lynch wrote for the three-judge panel.
William Salo, McKee's attorney, said he disagreed with the decision
and may appeal.
"They're saying just because a famous person rapes you, you become a
public figure if you complain about it," he said.
Alan Greenberg, a lawyer for Cosby, welcomed the "well-reasoned
decision confirming that there was no defamation.”
McKee sued Cosby in 2015, a year after the Nevada resident told the
newspaper he raped her in a Detroit hotel room in 1974.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond; Editing by Scott Malone and Peter
Cooney)
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