Cosby is now in a maximum-security state prison in Pennsylvania, where he is serving three to 10 years.
“Mr. Cosby has been incarcerated for nearly seven months, yet review of his legally infirm and unsupported conviction by this Honorable Court is being delayed by the lower court, which has failed to file a timely opinion,” his lawyers wrote in a filing to the Pennsylvania Superior Court, which hears appeals.
Cosby, 81, was sentenced in September for drugging and sexually assaulting Andrea Constand, in his home outside Philadelphia in 2004. He maintained his innocence and immediately said he would appeal.
In December, his lawyers filed papers with the Superior Court that challenged the way the trial judge in the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, Steven T. O’Neill, handled parts of the case.
The lawyers, for example, say O’Neill wrongly ignored the testimony by a former district attorney who said he had promised never to prosecute Cosby and that he erred by allowing testimony from five other women who had accused Cosby of drugging and sexually assaulting them.
“Bail is justified under the circumstances given Mr. Cosby’s advanced age and the strong likelihood that his conviction will not stand on appeal,” his lawyers, Brian W. Perry and Kristen L. Weisenberger, wrote in the latest request for bail.
In an Instagram post Wednesday that was attributed to Cosby, the entertainer characterized O’Neill as a racist who holds a grudge against him.
While the Cosby appeal process will not move forward until O’Neill issues his opinion, legal experts said the period of time that has elapsed since sentencing is by no means unusual in a case of such complexity.
“This was a long case,” said Dennis McAndrews, a Pennsylvania lawyer not connected to the Cosby case. “It’s fairly common for it to take at least this long to write up an opinion, especially where the issues are fairly complex and extensive.”
Lynne M. Abraham, a lawyer and former Philadelphia district attorney, counseled Cosby to be patient. “He has forgotten who he is. He is now a defendant. He has to wait for the court,” she said.
She added: “If he thinks the trial court takes a long time, the appeals court sometimes doesn’t put an opinion out for a year or more.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.