Bill Cosby Rape Allegations 2014: Lawyer Refutes Sexual Accusations Against His Client- Some Claims are 'Utter Nonsense'

After new allegations against Bill Cosby arose, his lawyer fired back at the accusers. He released a statement rebutting the charges, but Cosby himself has no intentions to comment about the issue. 

Because there is a growing number of accusations against Cosby, his attorney, Marty Singer, has finally spoken in his behalf. Singer published a public statement defending his client from the allegations. The statement mentioned the falsity of Linda Joy Traitz' assault claim that she said happened four decades ago.

In a public post in Traitz' Facebook account, she shared how Cosby allegedly assaulted her.

"He drove out to the beach and opened a briefcase filled with assorted drugs and kept offering me pills," Traitz wrote.

However, Singer believes that this account is fabricated.

"Ms. Traitz is the latest example of people coming out of the woodwork with unsubstantiated or fabricated stories about my client," Singer said. Singer also provided Traitz criminal records including identity theft, drug possession and fraud.

Cosby's lawyer also defended him on Carla Ferrigno's claims that Cosby attempted "to force himself at a party in 1967." Ferrigno is the wife and manager of Lou Ferrigno.

"This continuation of a 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 'sexual assault'," Singer said. He called the situation as "utter nonsense."

In the same way, Singer disputed Janice Dickson's accusation that Cosby sexually assaulted her in 1982. In a letter given to The Wrap, he cited a passage from Dickson's autobiography and a 2002 interview with the New York Observer, in which Dickinson claimed that the comedian "blew her off" after dinner because she didn't sleep with him.

The lawyer found the claims as an "outrageous defamatory lie."

He went on saying, "people coming out of nowhere with this sort of inane yarn is what happens in a media-driven feeding frenzy."

In the end, Cosby still refused to personally comment about the accusations hurled against him. During an interview with his wife Camille about their African art collection on National Public Radio Saturday, Cosby avoided the topic.