Bill Cosby has said that he believes he is entitled to 'millions and millions of dollars' for the more than two years he spent in jail.
A representative for Cosby did not state how much specifically the 84-year-old should receive nor where the funds should come from.
'Mr. Cosby was given an unwanted two-year and ten-month vacation that he never ask for. His constitutional rights were abolished, his due process was stripped away from him,' Andrew Wyatt, Cosby's representative, told NewsNation Now,
'He's due millions and millions of dollars. As Mr. Cosby said to me today, "I feel that this district attorney and Judge Steven O'Neill and Kevin Steele (Montgomery County district attorney) should resign effective immediately."'
Bill Cosby's publicist, pictured with his publicist, Andrew Wyatt, right has said he will seek compensation for his prison time
Bill Cosby is pictured in handcuffs at Montgomery County jail in Pennsylvania in September 2018 following his three-to-10-year sentencing
Cosby served more than two years of a three-to-10-year sentence at a Philadelphia-area state prison, but he had vowed to serve all ten years rather than acknowledge remorse over the 2004 encounter with him victim and his accuser Andrea Constand.
Cosby was convicted of drugging and molesting Constand at his home.
He was charged in late 2015 when a prosecutor unsealed new evidence.
'We are looking at what recourse, what legal recourse we can take against the state of Pennsylvania,' Wyatt told "The Domenick Nati Show last week. 'We are looking at all legal angles for those things right now.'
'He's owed money. It's a lot of owed money. Our attorneys are filing the paperwork now. He is owed a lot of money,' Wyatt added.
Bill Cosby stands next to his spokesman Andrew Wyatt and lawyer Jennifer Bonjean outside Cosby's home after