SPRING HILL, Fla. -- When William and Judy Thompson met comedian Bill Cosby in the late 1980s to discuss their teen daughter's modeling and acting career, they felt at ease.
Cosby and William Thompson belonged to black fraternities in college. They had lived in the Washington, D.C.-Maryland area. Both were born in July, and both went by Bill as a first name.
Cosby reassured the Thompsons their then-17-year-old daughter, Jennifer, would be fine living in an apartment with other models as she launched her career. He promised to help the teen, they said.
"We thought we were talking to Dr. Huxtable," said William Thompson, referring to the comedian's TV persona in "The Cosby Show."
Jennifer Thompson says she fended off unwanted sexual advances from Cosby and once performed a sex act on the comedian. He gave her $700. That encounter -- their final -- clouded Jennifer Thompson's next two decades.
"It basically shattered my faith so that anything that used to look promising to me, I saw it through a different lens," she said.
Thompson, 44, and her parents recently spoke about the encounters with Cosby. They also revealed three weeks ago, Judy Thompson sent a letter to Cosby's wife, Camille.
"Mother to mother," said Judy Thompson. "This letter was written from my heart."
Judy Thompson said she was inspired to pen the letter after she read Camille Cosby's statement in December suggesting her husband, not the women, is the party being harmed by the women's allegations.
Only recently has Jennifer Thompson emerged from under "the dark cloud," said Judy Thompson, who included a Psalms prayer in the letter.
"Your husband crossed boundaries that never should have been breached," she wrote to Camille Cosby. "He shattered her innocence."
Judy Thompson said she prays daily for the Cosbys and ended the letter by writing, "May you and Bill speak the truth and be afforded peace for your souls."
It could not be determined whether Camille Cosby received the letter.
Judy Thompson said that it was difficult to find anyone, even a therapist, who would believe her daughter's story. She didn't go to police.
"To be so hurt and violated, and then not be believed! Resolution has not been easily forthcoming. We all remained in the shadows of your husband's sick behavior," she wrote.
Jennifer Thompson was one 13 so-called "Jane Does" in a 2005 civil suit that was brought by a woman named Andrea Constand, a former Temple University employee who claimed Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her in 2004.
Constand later settled out of court and Thompson and the other women did not testify in the case.
Cosby on Monday released a new video message, his first in months. He doesn't discuss the allegations and in the short video, promoted his Saturday show in Wheeling, West Virginia, the next stop in Cosby's stand-up comedy tour which has seen more than a dozen shows canceled since the most recent round of allegations arose in November.
"You know I'll be hilarious," Cosby said in the video. "Can't wait."
He also added a note to the video, which read: "Dear fans, I hope you enjoy my wonderful video message that's filled with laughter ... Hey, hey, hey, I'm far from finished."
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