Cosby appeal tests other accusers’ testimony in #MeToo era
When three Pennsylvania Superior Court judges gather Monday to hear Bill Cosby’s appeal of his sexual assault conviction, more than the aging comedian’s freedom may be at stake.
As the first celebrity convicted in the #MeToo era, the court scrutiny of the case could cement — or threaten — the movement itself.
“If it’s reversed, I worry that it’s going to play into the narrative that stories of people subjected to gender-based violence are not going to be believed,” said Professor Margaret Johnson, who teaches gender law at the University of Baltimore School of Law. “I’ve been struck by … the power of the backlash against #MeToo.”
Just recently, a lawyer for actor Cuba Gooding Jr., accused of grabbing a woman’s breast at a New York nightclub, challenged her mental state as the case was sent to trial. The lawyer, Mark Heller, said he was starting “the “Not Me Movement,” under the hashtag “#NotMe.”