The System Isn't Broken. It's Working Exactly As Designed.
In the wake of a judge declaring a mistrial in the criminal case against Bill Cosby, his spokesman, Andrew Wyatt, continued to speak of the entertainment industry behemoth, whose fortune is estimated to be upwards of $400 million, as a victim. Addressing reporters outside the courthouse, Wyatt claimed, “Mr. Cosby’s power is back. It’s back. It has been restored.”
It was only a month ago when Cosby’s daughter, Ensa Cosby, released a statement to the popular syndicated morning radio show, The Breakfast Club, decrying the purported double standard against black men in rape cases, claiming:
How my father is being punished by a society that still believes that black men rape white women that passes off as ‘boys will be boys’ when white men are accused. How the politics of our country prove my disgust. My father has been publicly lynched in the media.
Bill Cosby himself pushed the notion that his race played a role in his criminal trial in a conversation with SiriusXM host Michael Smerconish. In his first public interview in two years, Cosby was asked about his daughter’s assertion that racism played a role in his scandal and answered this way:
“Could be, could be. I can’t say anything, but there are certain things that I look at, and I apply to the situation, and there are so many tentacles. So many different — nefarious is a great word. And I just truly believe that some of it may very well be that.”
Even after it was noted that the women—the number of which has approached 60—who have accused him of raping them have been both black and white, Cosby countered:
“Let me put it to you this way: When you look at the power structure, and when you look at individuals, there are some people who can very well be motivated by whether or not they’re going to work. Or whether or not they might be able to get back at someone. So if it’s in terms of whatever the choice is, I think that you can also examine individuals and situations and they will come out differently. So it’s not all, not every, but I do think that there’s some.”
There it is again: power, specifically the notion that no matter how wealthy you become in this country, your power will be diluted instantaneously if you are black. Last fall, Cosby’s attorney Brian McMonagle noted that the comedian “is no stranger to discrimination and racial hatred.” More recently, McMonagle decried what he called “a systematic exclusion of African-Americans” in the jury pool.
No one with a basic understanding of America’s past and present should be deluded about the realities of systemic racism—especially when it comes to the right to a fair trial and the idea that you should be innocent until proven guilty. Racism is historically tied to accusations of rape, particularly if it involves a black man and a white woman. However, when it comes to power and sexual assault, the system affords men far more sway than women no matter the hue.
When women step forward to accuse men of rape, they must endure an invasive physical exam, are compelled to divulge their sexual history (which is often exploited to soil their reputations), and are further traumatized by having to relive their assault in court. And, more often than not, their rapists are not convicted; in 2013, a Department of Justice study found that only one in 20 rape cases lead to a felony conviction. All of it prompts the question of whether coming forward about a rape and enduring even more suffering is worth it at all.
The justice system is not fair to black people collectively, but in terms of sexual assault, our present system is set up far more favorably for men accused of rape than women who have been raped. In the case of Bill Cosby, a man of great wealth and influence, it is even more favorable. The jurors may have deliberated for 50 hours before ending in deadlock and subsequent mistrial, but the story of how we got here tells us all how easy it was to end this way.
Cosby was sued more than a decade ago by Andrea Constand, and although it did generate headlines like “Bill Cosby Under Fire” at the time, Cosby’s public image took no real damage. Of course, this is not long after Cosby started touring the country and condemning poor black people for not living up to the promise of the civil rights movement. This man was lecturing folks about their apparent bad behavior before going on to settle a suit over allegedly slipping women quaaludes before sexually assaulting them.