US comedian Bill Cosby offered pills and payments to women he had sexual encounters with, and tried to hide it from his wife, according to court documents cited in the New York Times.
The newspaper obtained a transcript from a deposition Cosby gave 10 years ago as part of a lawsuit from former Temple University employee Andrea Constand, who accused him of drugging and molesting her.
Cosby said he acted as a mentor to Constand, and wooed her by "inviting her to my house, talking to her about personal situations dealing with her life, growth, education," according to the deposition quoted in the Times.
The pair remained in contact for several years in the early 2000s, and one night at his house in Pennsylvania he said he gave her one and a half tablets of the over-the-counter antihistamine drug Benadryl to relieve stress.
They reportedly kissed and had sexual contact afterward, according to the newspaper.
But Constand's lawyer said she believed he gave her a much stronger drug.
Constand maintains she was not seeking money from Cosby, but the actor said his wife, whom he married in 1964, would have likely thought support he provided her was for her education.
"My wife would not know it was because Andrea and I had had sex and that Andrea was now very, very upset and that she decided that she would like to go to school," he is quoted as saying in the deposition.
Cosby also channelled $US5,000 ($A6,749) to Therese Serignese, who accuses Cosby of drugging and taking advantage of her, through her agent so his wife would not find out, according to the newspaper.
Cosby, 78, maintains any sexual relations he had with Constand were consensual, and accuses her of lying.
"I think Andrea is a liar and I know she's a liar because I was there. I was there."
He said he had a knack for reading women's signals and body language and said Constand did not "walk out with an attitude of a huff," referring to one of their sexual encounters.
Constand's lawsuit was settled with Cosby in 2006 on undisclosed terms.
The 1,000-page deposition offers more details from court documents unsealed earlier this month, in which Cosby admitted to having obtained seven prescriptions for Quaaludes and giving them to other people.
But in the deposition, he avoided questions about who he gave drugs to and when, and whether he gave women drugs without their knowledge.
Cosby has never been charged with a crime, though the embattled actor has been accused by dozens of women of attacks going back decades.
Los Angeles police said this month they are pursuing a sex assault probe into the comic.
Cosby, a pioneering African-American comedian who played a beloved family doctor on the hit 1980s sitcom The Cosby Show, has lost public supporters in the wake of the sex scandal.
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