Editor’s Note: This story has been updated and edited for clarity since it last published on May 3, 2015, to note the criminal charge filed in late December 2015 against Bill Cosby alleging sexual assault. The story includes a summary of accusations by some of at least 50 women who have accused Cosby of a variety of misdeeds from the 1960s to more recent years. Cosby has denied wrongdoing, but in a deposition, released in July 2015, Cosby said he did have extramarital relationships and gave prescription sedatives to women he wanted to have sex with. He says the sex and drug-taking were always consensual.

CNN  — 

The news that prosecutors have charged Bill Cosby with sexual assault further dismantles his image as the jovial, pudding-loving patriarch whose family-friendly brand of comedy tickled successive generations.

Though the star has vehemently denied accusations that he drugged and sexually assaulted young women seeking career guidance, the stories are taking their toll on his reputation and bankroll.

Prosecutors in Pennsylvania have charged Cosby with aggravated indecent assault, a felony. The charges relate to an assault reported by former Temple University employee Andrea Constand, her attorney said. She has said Cosby drugged and fondled her, and digitally penetrated her, in his home, in 2004. In the deposition, Cosby described the encounter as consensual.

Constand was the first person to publicly allege sexual assault by Cosby – and the charge Cosby faces in her case represents the first criminal charge levied against him since the allegations arose.

Despite Cosby’s denials of wrongdoing, it’s clear many people have already tried him in their minds.

When an NPR reporter gave him a chance to deny the allegations in November 2014, Cosby provided an awkward moment of radio silence, refusing to answer the question. Given the same chance by The Associated Press, he offered no comment. When the interview concluded, he told a reporter that asking him about the allegations was a mark of low integrity and said he’d be appreciative if that portion of the interview was “scuttled.”

Cosby later told Florida Today he won’t respond to “innuendos,” referring to the women’s accusations.

“I know people are tired of me not saying anything, but a guy doesn’t have to answer to innuendos. People should fact-check. People shouldn’t have to go through that and shouldn’t answer to innuendos,” Cosby told the newspaper in a backstage interview before a sellout performance at the King Center for the Performing Arts in Melbourne, Florida.

At least 50 women have accused Cosby. Here’s a look at some of their accusations.

1960s

Cindra Laddc

The now-wife of Academy Award-winning film producer Alan Ladd Jr. was a single 21-year-old in 1969 when she met Cosby in New York, according to an account Cindra Ladd wrote for the Huffington Post. At the time, she said she was working in New York for the late film producer Ray Stark, who had just produced “Funny Girl.”

Cosby asked her for her phone number, which she gave, according to Ladd.

One evening, Cosby and Ladd agreed to see a movie and met at an apartment that Cosby said belonged to a friend, Ladd wrote. She had “a terrible headache,” and Cosby offered “a miracle cure” given by his doctor, she said.

“He went into another room and came back with a capsule. I asked a couple of times what it was. Each time he reassured me, asking, ‘Don’t you trust me?’ Of course I did. This was Bill Cosby,” Ladd wrote.

What happened that evening “remains a blur,” even 45 years later, wrote Ladd, who became an entertainment executive.

What she does remember, she claimed, is “waking up the next morning nude in the bed of his friend’s apartment and seeing Cosby wearing a white terrycloth bathrobe and acting as if there was nothing unusual,” Ladd alleged. “It was obvious to me that he had had sex with me. I was horrified, embarrassed and ashamed. There was a mirror above the bed, which shocked me further.”

Nine years ago, she told her husband of nearly 30 years of the incident after a woman sued Cosby with similar allegations, Ladd said. Her husband couldn’t be reached for an interview, and his attorney declined to comment on the wife’s claim of disclosure.

Ladd said she chose to disclose her account publicly in January after more than 20 women came forward with accusations.

“I have no plans to sue, I don’t want or need money. I have no plans for a press conference or for doing any interviews,” Ladd wrote. “So why speak out at all and why now? The simple answer is that it’s the right thing to do. The truth deserves to be known.”

Cosby’s representatives declined to respond to CNN’s repeated requests for comment.

Carla Ferrigno

The now-wife of “The Incredible Hulk” star Lou Ferrigno told CNN that Cosby forcibly kissed her at his home in 1967.

Carla Ferrigno said she told her husband, whom she married in 1980, about the incident about five years ago and he advised her to stay silent.

“I am going public (now) because I am just one more person who puts the nail in his coffin,” she said.

A Cosby lawyer called the media coverage of the allegation “utter nonsense.”

“This continuing pattern of attacks on Mr. Cosby has entered the realm of the ridiculous, with a purported ‘forceful kiss’ at a party in 1967, nearly 50 years ago, being treated as a current ‘news story’ and grossly mischaracterized as a ‘sexual assault,’” Cosby attorney Martin Singer said in a statement.

Carla Ferrigno was an 18-year-old Playboy bunny when she went with a male friend to Cosby’s house. The comedian and his wife went to a movie with Ferrigno and her date, then returned to Cosby’s home in Beverly Hills.

She told CNN that Cosby’s wife disappeared while the other three played pool.

After her date left the room, Cosby grabbed her, pulled her to him and kissed her, she said.

“It was so unexpected and so rough. He kissed me right in the mouth.”

Kristina Ruehli

Ruehli alleges the comedian gave her cocktails, which she believes contained drugs, during a 1965 visit to his home.

At the time, Ruehli was a secretary for a talent agency that had Cosby as a client. She said she was invited to the home to celebrate a taping of “Hollywood Palace.” Ruehli said she and an unnamed actress were the only attendees at the party.

She said she became unconscious after consuming drinks, and later woke up to find Cosby attempting to force her mouth onto his pubic area. She said she pulled away to vomit and drove herself home. It was the last time she would see Cosby, she told CNN.

Linda Brown

Brown was a 21-year-old model when she met Cosby in 1969, the same year she made television history when she became the first model in North America to wear only a bra from the waist up on the screen. It was a Wonderbra ad, and before then, TV ads used mannequins, she said.

Modeling since age 19, Brown was born in Canada and was living there when Cosby was doing a performance near her hometown, whose name she didn’t disclose. She said her agent introduced them, and Brown and Cosby had dinner after his show. Brown’s agent is now deceased, Brown’s attorney, Gloria Allred, said.

They dined at a restaurant, and Cosby took her to a friend’s apartment, where he served her a soft drink.

“I took a sip and blacked out,” Brown said at a press conference with her attorney in February. “When I awakened, I was naked in the bed beside him.

“I couldn’t move or speak. I felt paralyzed. He flipped me over and sexually assaulted me. I felt like a rag doll and like a real-life blow-up doll for him. I was in a stupor. Later, after he finished and when I was finally able to get up and got dressed, I got out of there as soon as I could. I felt dirty, ashamed and embarrassed,” she said, tearfully.

“He is a Jekyll and Hyde personality and if you trust him, then you have been fooled by him, too,” she said.

Cosby’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Joan Tarshis

Tarshis was a 19-year-old actress in 1969 when, she said, she met Cosby in Los Angeles. The two became friendly. One night after taping his sitcom, he invited her back to his bungalow and fixed her a “redeye” (a Bloody Mary topped with beer), she alleged.

“The next thing I remember was coming to on his couch while being undressed,” she told Hollywood Elsewhere. “I was sickened by what was happening to me and shocked that this man I had idolized was now raping me. Of course I told no one.”

It was the first of two similar incidents, said Tarshis, who is now a journalist and publicist.

Linda Joy Traitz

Linda JoyTraitz has a criminal record in Florida and spent time in prison on a conviction for drug trafficking, according to state records.

Cosby lawyer Singer passed on her lengthy rap sheet as an indication of her character.

Traitz spoke openly about her record to CNN, including her last arrest in 2008, which led to more than three years in prison for drug trafficking and possession.

“When I got sent to prison … it saved my life,” she said. “It was a great experience for me.” It ended her addiction to pain pills, and she’s been clean ever since, she said.

Numerous arrests speckle Traitz’s rap sheet, including on suspicion of theft, battery and types of deception – fraud and impersonation – often in connection with drug possession.

She said Cosby pushed himself on her when she worked as a waitress at a restaurant in Los Angeles that Cosby co-owned when she met him in 1969.

Billboard Magazine mentioned Cosby co-owned a restaurant in a 1970 article.

Traitz was either 18 or 19 at the time, she said; she did not recall exactly. But she was fresh out of high school and new to the city, she said.

Cosby offered her a ride home, but on the way told her he’d like to swing by the beach with her in his Rolls Royce, she said. They parked, and he offered her drugs, an array of brightly colored pills, “to relax,” she alleged.

She said no, a few times. “He kept offering me the pills,” she alleged, and it made her feel uncomfortable. She claimed that he then groped her chest, pushing her down in the seat and toward the door, and tried to lie on top of her.

She got out of the car and ran, she said. She added that she was “absolutely not” raped. He tried to calm her, she said, then drove her home in silence.

Cosby’s attorney said her account was not true.

“Ms. Traitz is the latest example of people coming out of the woodwork with fabricated or unsubstantiated stories about my client,” Singer said in a statement.

Victoria Valentino

Playboy bunny Victoria Valentino said her friend Francesca Emerson first introduced her to Cosby hoping to help her get work on his show “I Spy” in the late ’60s.

Valentino said after an interview in his trailer, Cosby invited her and a different friend to dinner.

They drank red wine at dinner, where she said Cosby offered her pills to “cheer up.”

She remembers feeling “stoned,” slurring her words.

She went with him to a place where he had memorabilia, she said. She described it as a space in an apartment building that was like an office, with two loveseats and no working phone. It was a “ballers pad,” she said.

At some point during the evening, she said, she was feeling “totally out of it” when she saw Cosby attempting to advance on her passed-out friend. She said she began reaching out to Cosby to pull him off her friend when Cosby pushed her down, first pushing himself near her mouth, before turning her around and raping her.

On why she never spoke then about the incident, Valentino told CNN, “As a playmate I thought, who would believe me?”

“I couldn’t bring myself to jump into the fire.”

Emerson told CNN that Valentino told her about the alleged incident with Cosby shortly after it happened.

She said Valentino at the time was in a position to be taken advantage of because she was vulnerable and had just lost her son. Valentino told CNN that at the time she was deeply grieving the loss of her 7-year-old son, who had drowned in a pool at her music manager’s house.

Emerson, now 73, said Cosby was never inappropriate with her; in fact, he once gave her $1,000 after she told him she was signing up for food stamps.

Valentino said her daughters knew about this incident. She wrote a story about it and thought about publishing it, but then held back.

“I can’t hear his name … something inside me shrinks and sinks when I think of him,” she said.

CNN repeatedly reached out to Cosby’s attorney for comment regarding Valentino’s allegations but did not hear back.

1970s

Beverly Johnson

Johnson burst on the modeling scene in the 1970s, the first black woman to appear on the cover of American Vogue. But in the 1980s she was going through a tough divorce and custody battle and looking for a break in the acting world. That’s when her agent called to say that Cosby wanted her to audition for “The Cosby Show.”

In an interview with CNN, Johnson said that Cosby appeared kind and helpful in their initial meetings, including once when she and her daughter both saw him at his Manhattan brownstone.

Johnson went back alone a few days later, recalling that Cosby was “very insistent” she drink a cup of cappuccino he had made for her.

“After that second sip, I knew I had been drugged,” she alleged. “It was very powerful, it came on very quickly.”

Johnson said she then confronted and cursed out the comedian. The famed model alleged that Cosby got angry, grabbed her, took her outside and flagged down a taxi for her.

Reflecting on why she didn’t go public with her story sooner, Johnson said part of it was because she wasn’t sexually assaulted, she was ashamed of speaking out and felt that Cosby was a “powerful man in an industry that I would like to be a part of.”

Cosby’s attorney didn’t immediately return a CNN call for comment on Johnson’s allegation, which she first made in a Vanity Fair article.

Tamara Green

In 1970, attorney Green was an aspiring model in her early 20s. At a working lunch with Cosby and others, she was suffering from the flu, and Cosby “went into some sort of office area at the back of the restaurant and he produced two capsules in his hand,” she told Matt Lauer of the “Today” show. She said they made her feel “great” at first, but then left her “almost literally facedown on the table of this restaurant.”

Cosby took her to her apartment and started “groping me and kissing me and touching me and handling me and you know, taking off my clothes,” Green said.

Green said she told Cosby “that if he didn’t kill me and he tried to rape me, it was going to go very badly,” she said.

Green further detailed her allegations in a defamation lawsuit against Cosby filed in December. In the 1970 incident, Green told Cosby repeatedly “you’re going to have to kill me” in an effort to stop his assault, the suit said.

“It was not until plaintiff Green was able to upend a table lamp that defendant Cosby stopped,” the lawsuit says.

Cosby allegedly left two $100 bills on her coffee table and left, the lawsuit says.

A lawyer for Cosby told the “Today” show, “Miss Green’s allegations are absolutely false. Mr. Cosby does not know the name Tamara Green or (maiden name) Tamara Lucier, and the incident she describes did not happen.”

Green’s attorney, Joseph Cammarata, said the suit was filed in a federal court in Massachusetts because Cosby has a residence there, in Franklin County. In the 1990s, Cammarata initially represented Paula Jones in her sexual harassment lawsuit against Bill Clinton, who while President paid Jones $850,000 to settle the suit.

About Green’s lawsuit against Cosby, Cammarata said: “She will have an opportunity to litigate her accusations against Mr. Bill Cosby. Period. And he will have the same fair opportunity to defend himself against them.”

Cosby attorney Singer said in a statement: “We are very confident that we will prevail in this proceeding and we will pursue claims against the attorneys who filed this action.”

Judy Huth

Judy Huth has filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming sexual battery and infliction of emotional distress during an incident at the Playboy Mansion, according to court documents.

The alleged sexual assault took place in 1974 when Huth was 15 years old.

According to court documents, Huth and a 16-year-old friend met Cosby when he was filming a movie at Lacy Park in Los Angeles.

After talking with the girls, the suit alleges, Cosby invited them to come to his tennis club the next Saturday, “where he served them alcoholic beverages and played games of billiards.”

They then went to the Playboy Mansion where, the lawsuit says, Cosby asked Huth to sit on a bed beside him, after she came out of a bathroom.

“He then proceeded to sexually molest her by attempting to put his hand down her pants, and then taking her hand in his hand and performing a sex act on himself without her consent.”

The suit goes on to call Cosby’s alleged actions “malicious, oppressive and fraudulent in nature.”

“This traumatic incident, at such a tender age, has caused psychological damage and mental anguish for (Huth) that has caused her significant problems throughout her life since the incident.”

The case describes the damages as “substantial and continuing.”

Huth is asking for damages and legal fees.

Cosby lawyer Singer has filed a pleading in the case and said Huth’s claims are “absolutely false.” He accused her of engaging in extortion after Cosby rejected her “outrageous demand for money in order not to make her allegations public.”

“Through her lawyer, plaintiff made extortionate threats to Mr. Cosby (through his counsel) about criminal penalties, coupled with ever-increasing demands for a six-figure payday to keep quiet about her long-since expired claims,” Singer said.

Singer said that Huth claimed recently she didn’t remember the alleged abuse, which he said in some cases could provide for an exception to the statute of limitations, but tried to sell the story to a media outlet 10 years ago.

He asked the court to impose monetary sanctions of $33,295 in court and legal fees.

P.J. Masten

Masten was a Playboy bunny in her 20s, working as a server at one of its establishments when she met Cosby. He asked her to lunch one afternoon in Chicago, then later called to invite her out to dinner in 1977, she told CNN’s Alisyn Camerota.

There were four other men watching sports, smoking cigars and playing cards when she arrived at Cosby’s room in Chicago’s Whitehall Hotel – with no suspicions of anything awry, she said.

The comedian asked Masten if she wanted a cocktail before dinner, and she replied by requesting “a little bit of Grand Marnier.” Behind her, he poured a drink with some ice, gave it to her and she drank it, she said.

“And the next thing I know, it was 4 o’clock in the morning,” Masten said. “I woke up in a bed naked, bruised. He was lying next to me, and I slithered out of the bed, my clothes all over the floor. … I got myself together, I went downstairs, I got in a cab and I went home.”

Masten recalled “hurting really bad.” As to why, she alleged: “There were bruise marks all over me. I knew I was raped by him.”

A few days later, Masten said she talked to her supervisor about what happened. Her supervisor, noting that Cosby was close friends with Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, told her to keep quiet, she claimed.

Cosby’s attorney didn’t immediately respond to a CNN request for comment about Masten’s claim.

Helen Hayes

In a statement released through lawyer Gloria Allred’s office, Hayes alleged that Cosby followed her and two friends “around all day” at a summer 1973 celebrity tennis tournament in Pebble Beach, California, hosted by actor Clint Eastwood.

Hayes claimed that she and her friends tried to avoid Cosby, but he caught up with them in a restaurant, “approached me from behind and reached over my shoulder and grabbed my right breast.”

“I was stunned and angry, because he had no right to do that and I did not know why he would behave that way,” Hayes said. “His behavior was like that of a predator.”

Louisa Moritz

“We’ve reached a point of absurdity.”

That was the reaction of Cosby’s attorney when former actress Louisa Moritz told her story to entertainment website TMZ.

“The stories are getting more ridiculous. Now this woman is claiming that something occurred more than 40 years ago and that while she was waiting in the dressing room to appear on the ‘Tonight Show,’ my client forced his penis into her mouth,” the statement read.

That is what TMZ reported that Moritz alleged.

She was in the green room at NBC in New York in 1971 when Cosby paid her a visit, she alleged. He offered to turn her into a “major star through his direction,” she told TMZ.

Then he forced himself on her, she alleged.

Moritz was known for her roles mostly as a blond bombshell, according to her IMDb profile. She is probably best known for her role as a prostitute in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”

In real life, she was anything but mindless, IMDb wrote. She was a licensed lawyer in California and made the dean’s list in law school.

Singer also called her credibility into question over disciplinary action the state bar took against her over a legal fee.

She received as a disciplinary measure a “public reproval” in 2013 after taking a legal fee for work that was not performed. She refunded the fee after the client complained to the bar, according to documents.

In September, Moritz, who is 68, did not respond to a notice of disciplinary charges and as a result, a court recommended her disbarment.

CNN made multiple calls to numbers listed for Moritz, and has not been able to reach her.

Donna Motsinger

One of the Jane Does who was part of a civil suit with Andrea Constand, who alleged an incident with Cosby in 2004, was Donna Motsinger. Speaking publicly now, Motsinger, 73, said she worked at a restaurant in Sausalito, California, that was popular with celebrities in the early 1970s. She met Cosby there, and said he asked her to his show. She accepted.

“I was so young, so innocent, I was so impressed that somebody so famous wanted to go out with me. My goodness, I was over the moon,” Motsinger told CNN.

She said they stopped for gas and had an alcoholic beverage. By the time they got to the theater, she felt sick and asked for an aspirin. Motsinger said Cosby gave her what she thought was an aspirin.

“The next thing I remember from that minute on, after that there was some conversation and laughing and stuff, but then the next thing I remember and I don’t know the time between the aspirin and this time but the next thing I remember I had become conscious in the limousine, he’s next to me, he’s got his hands on me and I look up I see the lights of the city. I could see it clear as a bell in my mind right now, the lights of the city coming back and it was all blurry, kind of the lights, and I passed out again,” she said.

Motsinger continued: “The next thing I knew I woke up the next morning in my own bed, in my own house with all my clothes off except for my underwear and I didn’t tell a soul.”

Therese Serignese

Florida nurse Therese Serignese, 57, told ABC’s “20/20” that she was a 19-year-old model visiting Las Vegas when Cosby handed her pills in a private dressing room after a performance.

“Take these,” Cosby told her, according to Serignese.

After consuming the pills, she remembered “feeling drugged, and I was kind of leaning forward, and he was behind me having sex with me. And I – I remember it because it was not good.”

Serignese did not make public accusations in the immediate aftermath of the 1976 incident. She explained her decision in a November 2014 article she wrote in the New York Daily News.

“Cosby was everywhere. Everyone thought he was a great family man. I knew he wasn’t. I just couldn’t prove it with anything but my word. There was no video camera or DNA evidence. No one else had accused him publicly yet,” Serignese wrote.

She added: “He didn’t drink or take the pills. They could test him, and he’d be clean.”

Serignese said she was going to testify to support Constand in her civil lawsuit against Cosby.

“When the first victim came forward in 2005, I was angry that he called her a liar. I wanted to back her up. But even then I worried about the repercussions. I had younger children then,” Serignese wrote.

“Ten years ago, the climate still wasn’t right. We would have all been humiliated. Now, I could see it was time, and I would be safer. I wouldn’t be alone. It took me 38 years to feel safe,” she said.

Serignese told “20/20” that she called Cosby and saw him again after the initial encounter. When asked whether she had sex with him again, she said, “I probably did.”

When asked whether that sex was consensual, Serignese said: “Oh, that’s an interesting way to phrase it, isn’t that? I would say I never was an active participant in any sexual intercourse with him.

“I never gave the impression that I wanted sex with him whatsoever. I would say, from my perspective, that I was used,” she said.

In a general response to the accusations, Cosby’s attorney Singer called the increasing number of claims of sexual assault against the legendary comedian “ridiculous” and said the media should stop airing “unsubstantiated, fantastical stories.”

Singer said in a written statement sent to CNN that it defies common sense that “so many people would have said nothing, done nothing, and made no reports to law enforcement or asserted civil claims if they thought they had been assaulted over a span of so many years.”

1980s

Janice Dickinson

Cosby was a familiar face in 1982, not only for his comedy, but also for his Jell-O and Coca-Cola commercials. Dickinson was a supermodel in her late 20s.

Dickinson alleged that she and Cosby had dinner in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, and he gave her a glass of red wine and a pill she believed was for menstrual cramps.

“The last thing I remember was Bill Cosby in a patchwork robe, dropping his robe and getting on top of me. And I remember a lot of pain,” she told “Entertainment Tonight.”

Cosby’s attorney, Singer, said in a statement that Dickinson’s allegation was a “fabricated lie” that contradicted what she wrote in her autobiography and what she said during a 2002 New York Observer interview.

Jewel Allison

Allison was a model and aspiring actress in her late 20s when she first met Cosby in the late 1980s. She said he offered to help her out, inviting her to his home.

When she arrived, no one else was there besides Cosby, Allison said. At one point, after taking a few sips of wine, she began to feel “out of it.”

“I realized that something sexual was going on, but I was unable to stop it,” Allison told CNN.

Allison, an African-American, said she went home crying, feeling she’d been drugged and sexually assaulted by “the one person that meant so much” to her community.

Cosby’s lawyers did not respond to repeated requests by CNN for comment on Allison’s allegation.

Heidi Thomas

Thomas was an aspiring model and actress when she says she met Cosby in 1984. She says she visited Cosby at a house outside of Reno for “coaching.” Thomas says Cosby wanted her to relax, and he gave her a glass of Chablis.

Thomas admits that her memory of the next few hours is “foggy,” but she says, at one point, he may have asked her something like (Are you) “feeling the part now?” or “feeling the lines now?”

Thomas says that when she woke up Cosby was next to her in bed, naked and “forcing himself in my mouth.” She says she remembers feeling like she wanted to throw up.

A representative of Cosby did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Thomas’ allegation.

Barbara Bowman

In 1985, when Cosby was starring in his eponymous No. 1 TV show as a doting, wisecracking dad and doctor, Bowman, a 17-year-old model and actress, met Cosby in Denver. She came forward with her allegations in 2006 and recently wrote a column in The Washington Post questioning why no one listened to her the first time.

According to Bowman’s account, Cosby visited her numerous times, giving her acting lessons and “flying me around to major cities to events,” she told Newsweek. After she turned 18, Cosby “assaulted (me) a number of times.” In an incident in New York, Bowman “had one glass of wine and then I blacked out. I woke up throwing up in the toilet. … I was wearing a white T-shirt that wasn’t mine, and he was in a white robe.”

In an incident in Atlantic City, an angry Cosby “got on top of me and started taking his pants off and I was screaming and crying and begging him to leave me alone and I fought so hard and I was screaming so loud that he got mad and threw me aside and got away from me, and that was it.”

The Cosby camp replied, “Over the last several weeks, decade-old, discredited allegations against Mr. Cosby have resurfaced. The fact that they are being repeated does not make them true. Mr. Cosby does not intend to dignify these allegations with any comment.”

Lise-Lotte Lublin

Lublin was a 23-year-old model in 1989 when she met Cosby through her agency.

According to Lublin, she was alone with him in the Elvis suite of the Hilton Hotel in Las Vegas when Cosby asked her to do an improvisation for what she thought was an assessment of her acting skills.

Though she didn’t drink, Lublin claimed that Cosby insisted she drink a shot of alcohol to relax herself. She said no, but he insisted. So she drank it.

Cosby insisted she drink a second shot, and she did, she said.

“Within minutes, I became dizzy and disoriented,” Lublin said at a press conference in February joined by Brown and their attorney, Gloria Allred.

In the hotel, Cosby asked Lublin to sit by him.

“Then I sat on the end table with my back to his groin and he slid forward so that his legs were on each side of my arms,” Lublin said. “As I sat with my thoughts, he began stroking my hair back from my forehead, in a petting motion. He was talking but I don’t recall what he was saying.”

She then recalled seeing “flashes” of unfamiliar areas of the hotel suite and several doors that she believed led to the bedroom.

“My next memory was waking up at home, and for me, it felt like several days had passed,” she said, not able to remember how her car became parked in the driveway.

She showed reporters a photo of Cosby with her mother, Christina Izzard, and another of Cosby with her and her sister, Maria Diaz. The photos were taken before the alleged incident, Lublin said.

Cosby’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Chelan

Identifying herself only by a first name during a news conference with lawyer Gloria Allred, Chelan said she was a 17-year-old aspiring model in 1986 who worked at the Las Vegas Hilton when her father’s wife wrote and sent pictures of her to Cosby.

Cosby called Chelan at home, arranging to meet her at the Nevada hotel “to introduce me to someone from the Ford modeling agency,” she said.

After she got there, the then-high schooler said Cosby gave her “a blue pill, which he said was an antihistamine, with a double shot of Ameretto.”

Chelan claimed that someone did come into the room, “took a couple of pictures and told me to lose 10 pounds. Then they left.”

That left her alone with Cosby, who she said offered her another shot of Ameretto.

She alleged that Cosby lay down next to her on the bed and began touching her sexually and grunting.

“I could not open my eyes,” Chelan said in a statement. “I couldn’t move or say anything. I felt something warm on my legs. Then I blacked out.”

Chelan claimed she awoke 13 to 16 hours later, at which point Cosby gave her $1,500 and invited her to his next show.

“My grandmother really wanted to go,” she said. “I did not, but I went with her and heckled him. As a result, I was fired from my job.”

Helen Gumpel

Gumpel said she is “not a victim, (but) I could have been.”

The Asian-American model and actress – who went by Helen Selby professionally – appeared as a member of the book club of Cosby’s onscreen wife, Clare Huxtable, in a late 1980s “Cosby Show” episode. A short time later, her agent got a call that Cosby wanted to meet with her.

In a statement, Gumpel said that, after Cosby hugged and kissed her in front of onlookers at a New York studio, she was asked back to his dressing room.

There, she found Cosby “wearing a loosely tied robe” and then – with the robe still on – he put “his crotch area in my face,” Gumpel alleged.

The comedian touched her shoulders then tried repeatedly to get Gumpel to have a drink he’d made, she said. After her refusals, Gumpel said, “Cosby turned his back to me and walked to the door. Cosby looked at me and his face clouded up, as if he was frustrated and angry, and he told me to leave.”

Gumpel said that, even if she didn’t go to police or the press, she didn’t stay silent. But after sharing her story with a number of people, she claims “almost everyone was disappointed with me” – including her agent and then-husband.

She decided to tell the media her story now, all these years later, “to support those women who allegedly were sexually abused” by Cosby.

“I cannot vouch for each and every woman who is making a sexual abuse claim against Cosby,” Gumpel said. “But I can see that several of their stories mirror mine with regard to (his alleged) sexual attempts. … Bill Cosby must take full responsibility for his actions.”

Beth Ferrier

In the mid-1980s, Ferrier moved from Colorado to New York to pursue her modeling career. It was then and there she met the comedian.

Talking to People magazine in 2006, Ferrier said that Cosby “came on as a mentor, almost a father.” But their relationship turned sexual, she said, alleging the pair had an off-and-on consensual affair that lasted several years.

Ferrier told People that when she tried to end the relationship at Denver’s Oxford Hotel, she drank some coffee and the next thing she remembered was waking “up in my car in the parking lot with my clothes all a mess.”

“I still wonder,” she said in 2006, “what did he do with me? Why was my bra unhooked? What happened?”

Cosby’s lawyers have not commented on Ferrier’s allegation specifically, though they have dismissed other claims as “preposterous” and “ridiculous.”

Shortly after appearing at a press conference alongside celebrity lawyer Gloria Allred and two other Cosby accusers, Ferrier told CNN in December that she later confronted Cosby in a hotel room about being drugged. He responded by telling her “come in and lay down … next to me, you must have had too much to drink,” Ferrier claims.

“My life ended the day I met Bill Cosby,” she says, noting her fears about coming forward with her story. “Because he is as powerful … or more powerful than God. And you don’t mess with God.”

2000s

Andrea Constand

In January 2004, Constand, then a 31-year-old staffer for the women’s basketball team at Temple University – Cosby’s alma mater – was at the comedian’s Cheltenham, Pennsylvania, home when Cosby provided her medication that made her dizzy, she alleged the next year.

She later woke up to find her bra undone and her clothes in disarray, she further alleged to police in her home province of Ontario, Canada, in January 2005.

Though Cosby’s attorney initially called Constand’s claim “utterly preposterous,” Cosby settled a civil suit with Constand that alleged 13 Jane Does had similar stories of sexual abuse.

When Cosby attorney John Schmitt sent out a blanket denial of several allegations that had cropped up recently, he later amended his denial to say he wasn’t referring to Constand, who resolved her differences “to the mutual satisfaction of Mr. Cosby and Ms. Constand years ago.”

In late December 2015, prosecutors in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania charged Cosby with three charges of aggravated indecent assault, a felony. The charges relate to an assault reported by former Temple University employee Andrea Constand, her attorney said.

In a previous deposition, Cosby described the encounter with Constand as consensual.

Chloe Goins

Goins told the Los Angeles Police Department on January 14 that Cosby sexually assaulted her in 2008 during a party at the Playboy Mansion, when she was 18.

“She was drugged. She doesn’t know what happened, she blacked out and woke up finding Mr. Cosby over her as she was in a state of complete undress,” said Spencer Kuvin, Goins’ attorney.

Kuvin said his client may be the first accuser to have a case that falls within the statute of limitations for bringing criminal charges.

Cobsy lawyer Singer denied the accusation and said the comedian was not in California on August 8, 2008, the night of the “Midsummer Night’s Party.”

CNN’s Katie McLaughlin, AnneClaire Stapleton, Todd Leopold, Brian Stelter, Susan Candiotti, Ronni Berke, Greg Botelho and Kristina Sgueglia contributed to this report.