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Over the Thanksgiving holiday, Bill Cosby sent out a series of tweets to his followers stating that he sees himself as an “educator” and a “political prisoner” while serving his sentence at the SCI-Phoenix maximum-security penitentiary near Philadelphia.
According to The Daily Mail, the disgraced comedian urged his supporters to step away from the mainstream media and instead give their support to Black media outlets.
Happy Thanksgiving & be thankful for the Native Americans. Yours truly, The Educator & The Political Prisoner.#HappyThanksgiving#BeThankfulForTheNativeAmericans#BillCosbyTheEducator#BillCosbyThePoliticalPrisoner#FarFromFinished https://t.co/p9ttonpEdJ
— Bill Cosby (@BillCosby) November 28, 2019
It’s #BlackFriday, so lets spend our dollars with #BlackPressUSA & all Black media outlets that propel the truth and the facts, not Fake News. The truth is in the pudding, this week Black Press USA proved its power and relevance to the world. https://t.co/JPudwjr9Ka
— Bill Cosby (@BillCosby) November 29, 2019
No longer should we succumb to the fear of many mainstream media outlets like Associated Press, CNN, NBC, New York Times, Washington Post & Radar Online just to name a few. Black Friday+Black People = BlackPressUSA#InvestInBlackPress#BlackPressEqualsTruth#BlackPressEqualsFacts
— Bill Cosby (@BillCosby) November 29, 2019
READ MORE: Defiant Bill Cosby speaks from prison, not giving an inch: ‘It’s all a setup’
Cosby, 82, has been defiant since he was accused of sexual assault by dozens of women over the past few years, either denying them or saying the affairs were consensual. His 2004 encounter with Andrea Constand, for which he was convicted, he maintains was consensual. He appealed his conviction in August.
Last week, in a series of phone interviews with the National Newspaper Publishers Association’s Black Press USA, Cosby revealed that he spends a significant amount of time dedicated to helping and encouraging a large population of African American inmates through a prison reform program called Mann Up. But also warned that when he comes out, the public should not expect him to give up on asserting his innocence.
“When I come up for parole, they’re not going to hear me say that I have remorse. I was there. I don’t care what group of people come along and talk about this when they weren’t there. They don’t know.” He said defiantly, adding, “It’s all a setup. That whole jury thing. They were imposters.”
READ MORE: Cosby defiant, unremorseful in prison; says he is ‘political prisoner’
U can tweet from prison? Just asking for me, not a friend lol. I hope u had a great day and got some turkey!! ?
— kayj412 (@kayj412) November 29, 2019
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