Bill Cosby crept into President Obama's press conference Wednesday on the historic nuclear deal with Iran.
While the scandal-plagued comedian wasn't actually at the White House, reporters wanted to know the status of his Presidential Medal of Freedom, which activists want revoked.
"There's no precedent for revoking a medal. We don't have that mechanism, and as you know, I tend to make it a policy not to comment on the specifics of cases where there might be, if not criminal, but civil issues involved," the President said.
Cosby has been accused by nearly 40 women of drugging their drinks, raping, coercing or sexually assaulting them. However, he has never been charged.
While President Obama didn't directly comment on the allegations, he did have this to say about rape in general: "If you give a woman, or a man for that matter, without his or her knowledge, a drug and then have sex with that person without consent, that's rape."
Earlier in the press conference, the President had a blunt answer for CBS News' Major Garrett on the Iran nuclear deal, calling his question nonsense. Garrett asked if Obama was content with the release of the four Americans imprisoned in Iran not happening as part of the deal.
The President seemed angry about the question, initially answering that "he loves" how Garrett crafted it.