In a joint statement on Monday, the jurors who voted to convict Bill Cosby of sexual assault last week said that they believed his accuser’s account and were persuaded of his guilt by the facts, not the momentum of social change captured in the #MeToo movement.

“Not once were race or the #metoo movement ever discussed, nor did either factor into our decision, as implied in various media outlets,” the jurors, whose names have not been released, said in the statement.

In particular, the jurors said they found the testimony of Andrea Constand, the former Temple University employee who said Mr. Cosby had drugged and molested her, to be believable. “Each one of us found her account credible and compelling,” the statement said.

The joint statement was released after an interview surfaced with the only one of the 12 jurors to come forward after the verdict to discuss the deliberations. The juror, Harrison Snyder, said in a television interview with ABC News that the most damning evidence was not Ms. Constand’s testimony or statements by five other women who said he had also assaulted them, but Mr. Cosby’s own comments.