R&B singer and actress Jill Scott has become the latest African-American celebrity to come to the defense of embattled comedian Bill Cosby, who has been accused in the last few weeks of multiple sexual assaults dating from the past several decades.
Although Cosby has never been charged with a crime, the controversy has cost him high-profile performances, a TV show in development with NBC, and ties to his alma maters Temple University and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.
RELATED: Bill Cosby resigns from Temple University board of trustees
On Monday, Scott, who received an honorary degree from Cosby at Temple this summer, passionately defended Cosby on social media, and her stance has led to clashes with some of her fans.
“I’m respecting a man who has done more for the image of Brown people that almost anyone EVER. From Fat Albert to the Huxtables,” she tweeted at one follower who questioned her defense of an alleged sex offender.
The performer, like many Cosby supporters, has cited the lack of physical evidence as part of her argument that there has been a rush to judgment. She went on to say that she fears the media is trying to destroy a “magnificent legacy.”
Rape is a despicable, cowardly crime. If you've been raped- plz do NOT shower, go to police IMMEDIATELY, have a rap kit done. GET EVIDENCE.
— ⭐Jill Scott⭐ (@missjillscott) December 1, 2014
Scott’s comments come on the heels of recent controversial remarks comedian Faizon Love made in Cosby’s defense during the media firestorm over the allegations. He called Hannibal Buress, a fellow comic whose reference to Cosby’s alleged sexual assaults helped the story gain traction, a “house n—a,” a term which is meant to imply racial betrayal. In increasingly vulgar tweets, Love hurled insults at Cosby’s accusers and suggested that black critics of the comedian were hopping on a “bandwagon.”









