Duke's Lacrosse Team Fiasco

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If they are tried in Durham i will be very suprised if they are acquitted. There are three majors employers in Durham. One is the tobacco companies wholse work force is darker thatn chain smokers lung. The other is Duke University and its network of hospitals the third is North Carolina Central University A historically black college that wishes it did not have to admit white applicants. Durham is 48% black. Almost all the whites work for either Duke University or one the Duke Univeristy hospitals. IF Nifong can exclude jurors that are affliated with Duke then he could very possibly seat an entirely black jury. If this happens the evidence is academic there will be a guilty verdict regaedless od how powerful the defenses case might be. The defense needs a change of Venue.
 

Bunnyman

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More news indicating the Duke case is a racist hoax:

ABC News Exclusive: Possible Indictment of Third Duke Lacrosse Player and DNA Details
Surrender Negotiated if Indicted, No Semen or Blood in Samples
By CHRIS CUOMO, LARA SETRAKIAN, CHRIS FRANCESCANI and ABC News' Law & Justice Unit
May 15, 2006 â€" - A third indictment in the Duke University lacrosse team rape case is likely and it will involve the player identified with "90 percent certainty" by the alleged victim during a photo lineup, ABC News has learned.

A grand jury is scheduled to meet today in the Durham County Judicial Building in North Carolina, and could hand down an indictment at any time. If an indictment is returned, the player's surrender to police has already been negotiated, ABC News has learned.

According to multiple sources, the defense attorney representing the player got a courtesy call from Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong alerting him of a possible indictment. Although defense attorneys are expecting an indictment and have been told that one is likely, prosecutors could change their minds and plans at any time.

However, tension seems to be rising between the prosecution and the defense. In a hallway confrontation today at the Durham County courthouse, Nifong laced into defense lawyer Kerry Sutton in an expletive-laden tirade where he complained angrily about last Friday's defense news conference. At that briefing, defense attorney Joe Cheshire and five other lawyers -- including Sutton -- criticized Nifong for releasing the second DNA report at 5 p.m. ET on a Friday and accused him of leaking selective portions of the report to the media.


No Semen on Swabs, No Blood on Plastic Nail

ABC News' Law & Justice Unit was given exclusive details about the latest DNA report in the Duke lacrosse rape investigation and was shown and reviewed parts of the 10-page document.

According to the DNA report, tests specifically designed to look for semen found none on swabs of the alleged victim's mouth or genital areas. This is noteworthy, defense lawyers said, because in at least one affidavit and in the transcript of the photo identification lineup, the alleged victim said she was raped orally, vaginally and anally by three members of the Duke men's lacrosse team.

However, numerous prosecutors have told ABC News that a rape could have occurred and that convictions were possible even if there was no semen found on the accuser. The alleged victim does not say in any affidavit whether any of her attackers ejaculated during the alleged assault.

The report also says that tests looking specifically for blood on the fake fingernail found in a bathroom trash can were negative. This could be significant because the accuser has said that she broke her fingernails while defending herself against the alleged attackers, and scratching them. It is unclear, however, whether her scratches drew blood.


Three Nonlacrosse Players in Report

Three men -- none of them Duke lacrosse players and all of whose identities are known by ABC News -- were listed in the report as providing DNA swabs to be tested against the samples found on the alleged victim.

One of the three men has told ABC News that he spoke to the alleged victim the night of the March 13 party. Another man is the alleged victim's boyfriend, and defense attorneys identified him in a news conference as the "single source" of DNA found to date in vaginal swabs of the accuser.

It is unclear why the three nonlacrosse players were included in the sampling.

Defense attorneys have complained that the report does not say whether DNA was found from people other than those who provided samples -- the lacrosse players, the boyfriend, and the two other men. There is no way of knowing whether there was DNA from other people found on the alleged victim, the defense argues.


DNA Found Was a 'Mixture,' No Clear-Cut Link

According to the report, the DNA found under the false fingernail was a mixture, containing more than one person's genetic material. The report suggests that one of the possible people in that genetic mixture was the alleged victim.

The report says that genetic material with the same characteristics of two lacrosse players was found underneath a plastic fingernail in a trash can in the bathroom where the accuser says she was attacked. This may have been the link prosecution sources referred to when they told ABC News that test results could be "helpful" to the prosecution.

Neither of the two men linked to the sample were Reade Seligmann or Collin Finnerty, the two Duke lacrosse players indicted in the case. However, the third Duke player who may be indicted soon was in the mixture.

A DNA link is not clear cut with the type of test used in this case, DNA experts told ABC News. ABC News spoke with DNA analysts, including Brian Meehan, head of DNA Security, the Burlington, N.C. laboratory that conducted the set of tests used in the case. All of the analysts agreed that the most one could say about a specific person -- the alleged third attacker in the Duke rape investigation -- was that he could not be ruled out, but also could not be definitively ruled in.

"It's not what [prosecutors] were hoping for," said David Rudolf, a North Carolina defense attorney. "It's obviously somewhat helpful, but not nearly as much as if it was a match. Instead it's simply consistent with one of the players at the party."

The fact that the DNA sample found on the nail was a mixture makes it more difficult to be certain that it can be linked to any given person, experts said. Because many people in the general population share the same genitive traits, said Dr. Elizabeth Johnson, a California-based DNA expert, "there would be many people who could have the same traits as what shows up in the mixture."

Defense attorneys are already trying to use the lack of a clear-cut link to bolster their case.

"This report shows no conclusive match between any genetic material taken on, about, in, or from the false accuser and the genetic material of any Duke lacrosse player," said attorney Joe Cheshire in a news conference.


Enough Evidence to Indict?

In a transcript of the photo lineup used to identify alleged attackers, the alleged victim says the third player, "looks like one of the guys who assaulted me sort of." She identified him with 90 percent certainty after Police Sgt. Mark Gottlieb asked, "What is the likelihood this is one of the gentlemen who assaulted you?"

Is a positive identification and possible linkage of DNA enough for a third indictment? Nifong proceeded with the first two indictments against Finnerty and Seligmann with no DNA match. In his case against the player defense sources say may be indicted today, Nifong has both an identification and a possible DNA link with the fake fingernail.

Nifong has said that even in the absence of any DNA match, he can still take this case to trial the "old-fashioned way" of putting a victim on the stand. He has cited a statistic that 75 percent to 80 percent of rape prosecutions proceed without DNA evidence.

As a general rule, Meehan -- whose lab produced the DNA report -- agrees the absence of DNA does not kill a prosecutor's case.

"It's not necessarily true that no DNA means no crime," Meehan said. Lawyers and DNA experts told ABC News that there needs to be additional evidence.

Although much of the possible evidence made public to date may favor the defense, the strength of key elements for the prosecution remains unknown. Details of the alleged victim's medical report and of a toxicology report from that night could be crucial. The prosecution could also have witnesses, photographs or videos of that night that might bolster its case.

Perhaps most critically, Nifong has one piece of evidence that no one in the public or on the defense can even approach: the opportunity to speak with the alleged victim.

ABC News' Gerry Wagschal contributed to this report.



Copyright © 2006 ABC News Internet Ventures
 

KG2422

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I'm glad the last young man who was indicted came out and defended himself and his buddies so vocally.
 

ironfist

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Ground Fighter said:
I can't believe this moron prosecuter is still persuing this case. Can anyone say "witch hunt"?
Believe it, In case you didn't know it we are all becoming second class citizens and Jesse Jackson told him to persue it. To a pathetic ass kissing white American like Nifong, what Jessie says, goes.
 
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Ironfist:


I agree totally, but we are not becoming second class citizens, we already ARE second-class citizens.

Also, I don't know if anyone heard about this yet, but I read something noteworthy about this case in an article on the web (I'd send the link, but I lost it). Apparently, members of the new black panther party were supposedly taunting and threatening the accused players in the courtroom. They were allegedly saying things to the likes of "justice will be served" and "you will all pay dearly". Things of that nature. Google the info I gave you, and see if you can find the excerpt.

These guys need support, and I'm not siding with them just because they're White, the biological evidence and the circumstances just DON'T point to them. Plus, theres just too many lies and half-truths surfacing now regarding this case. They are being run through the ringer by a self-absorbed prosecuter who has no racial loyalty, and only cares about his own personal
career gains.

To use a true example of b.s. from the system: O.J. was so guilty it was ridiculous
 
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In recent days, several establishment journalists and commentators have been severely criticizing the DA in the Duke Lacrosse Case.

Stuart Taylor, of the National Journal, blasted Nifong and the Duke administrators in terms that could have come from this site. Taylor wrote; "...more than 90 members of the Duke faculty who have prejudged the case, with some exuding the anti-white racism and disdain for student-athletes that pollutes many college faculties."

Note that Taylor used the term, "anti-white racism," probably a first for an establishment journalist. Taylor also wrote, "Many members of the media have published grossly one-sided accounts of the case while stereotyping the lacrosse players as spoiled, brutish louts and glossing over the accuser's huge credibility problems."

This National Journal column can be found at http://nationaljournal.com/taylor.htm
 

white lightning

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I was pleasantly suprised to hear that the Duke Womens Lacrosse Team wants to wear "innocent" wrist bands at their tournament game this Friday as a show of support for the Duke Men who have been accused.It is very refreshing to see white women sticking up for white men in this day and age of everyone kicking the white man while he is down.White males are the blunt of almost every type of attack known to make us look dumb,goofy,nerdy,uncool and unathletic.Good joy to the women of Duke.I only hope that the University allows them to wear those wristbands in competition.Somehow I think they will not allow it.
 

Don Wassall

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It's nice to see some jock solidarity and racial solidarity from the Duke girls even if they don't think of it that way. The Duke lacrosse players are so obviously innocent, but it takes a fair amount of courage to publicly support them in the "Land of the Free." The Duke girls are showing that they still understand the "Home of the Brave" part.
 

white tornado

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Lacrosse culture crisis: Play hard, party hardBy Greg Garber
ESPN.com
Archive

A year after graduating from Dartmouth College, Andrew Goldstein remains understandably proud of his accomplishments as an All-American goalie for the lacrosse team. Recently, Goldstein discovered that not everyone cherishes the sport as much as he does.


Goldstein, wearing a Dartmouth lacrosse T-shirt, was walking along Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco when a stranger approached him and stridently asked, "You're still willing to wear that shirt in public?"

Taken aback, Goldstein said he believes that the decisions of a few do not represent an entire sport.

"What happened at Duke has reinforced how people view lacrosse players as the elite," says Goldstein, who will play Major League Lacrosse this summer for the Long Island Lizards. "It's completely unfair to pin all these things on the sport."


AP Photo/Miles Kennedy
A year ago, Johns Hopkins beat Duke and celebrated a national lacrosse championship.Yet, setting aside for a moment the allegation of rape at a team lacrosse party just off campus in Durham, N.C., on March 13, critics continue to suggest that the self-acknowledged behavior of the Duke athletes fits with the culture of lacrosse. And more than a dozen ESPN.com interviews with those involved in the game at the college level indicate that the general party atmosphere that surrounded the Duke team is consistent with that generally found in the sport.


The infamous party 10 weeks ago spawned three arrests on charges of rape, as well as allegations of racism and the perception of a program out of control. The Duke team that lost to Johns Hopkins in last year's Division I championship withdrew from competition midway through the season, and its status for next year remains uncertain. In the wake of the scandal, and only one year after a nine-page valentine to the sport appeared in Sports Illustrated, lacrosse -- heading into the NCAA men's tournament semifinals and finals this weekend in Philadelphia -- is under siege.

"The sport of lacrosse is taking a beating," says Dom Starsia, head coach of the No. 1-ranked, 15-0 Virginia Cavaliers, who will meet Syracuse Saturday in one of two national semifinals at Lincoln Financial Field. "For coaches and administrators, this is our absolute worst nightmare. The college game is such a fragile little animal, anyway. If Duke doesn't bring the team back, I don't know where we're going to be."

Says Yale University lacrosse coach Andy Shay, "That's the prevailing fear among college coaches. When 99 percent of the country's first exposure to lacrosse is this incident, well, first impressions are the most important thing. It's certainly not something that we're all proud of. It's not indicative of the culture, but it's the first thing people are pointing to."

In June, when the national board of U.S. Lacrosse meets in Baltimore, the issue of culture will vault to the top of the discussion agenda. As the current five-year strategic plan designed to elevate lacrosse into the mainstream -- which, arguably, has happened -- comes to a close, members will work to craft a new course of action that will reposition the sport. Before the Duke incident occurred, the organization committed $4.5 million to programs that focus on character and the sport's Native American roots.

"As in any tragedy, these circumstances will certainly be a catalyst for even greater reflection on the sport's healthy development," says Steve Stenersen, U.S. Lacrosse's executive director. "I feel that the depiction of lacrosse in such a narrow way in the media as solely an elite, exclusive sport is not only inaccurate but almost irresponsible.

"Without dismissing the circumstances in Durham, it's our goal to more accurately depict where the sport is today."

Watch the NCAA championship
Saturday
Syracuse (10-4) vs. Virginia (15-0), 11:30 a.m. ET (ESPN2)
UMass (12-4) vs. Maryland (12-4), 2 p.m. ET (ESPN2)

Monday
National championship, 1 p.m. ET (ESPN)
After the story broke in Durham, it was reported that about one-third of Duke's men's lacrosse team -- 15 players -- had faced prior charges that included underage alcohol possession, creating a disturbance and public urination. Well before the March party, the university, hearing a stream of complaints from neighbors, purchased the house at 610 Buchanan Blvd., which had been leased for the 2005-06 academic year by three lacrosse players. Later, one of three players charged with the rape, 19-year-old Collin Finnerty, was ordered to stand trial for a previous assault charge. Finnerty and two friends allegedly punched a man in a Washington, D.C., suburb after the man had told them, according to court documents, to "stop calling him gay and other derogatory names." Before he was charged in the Duke incident, the assault charge was to have been dismissed once Finnerty completed 25 hours of community service.

"Drawing the line at sexual assault, I've seen stuff like this with our team and other teams at my school," said one Ivy League lacrosse player who, fearing the wrath of his coach, asked for anonymity. "The problem is, when alcohol becomes involved -- and it always does in college -- it impairs judgment.

"You get 40 juiced guys and two girls, and it's a time bomb."

Shay, the Yale coach, said the Duke story prompted many far-ranging discussions among coaches and players.

Could it have happened at his school? Shea paused, and sighed.

"Yes," he said. "It could have happened to any of us. It's scary. What we know has happened, it could have happened on any college campus, Division I, II or III. It just so happened to happen at a phenomenal academic institution, the ivory tower."

The culture
On the day Duke coach Mike Pressler resigned, university president Richard Brodhead announced the formation of five committees to investigate different facets of the scandal. Law professor James Coleman chaired a seven-member committee looking into the history of the lacrosse team's behavior. Less than a month later, on May 1, the report was made public.


Joseph Labolito/WireImage.com
Coach Mike Presser took the Blue Devils to the title game last year, but resigned in the wake of this spring's scandal.Brodhead summarized the 17-page report in two sentences: "The Coleman committee's report tells of a close-knit team that did well academically and excelled athletically but that was irresponsible in its repeated abuse of alcohol. The committee did not, however, find a pattern of racist behavior or sexual abuse."


A detailed chronology of the disciplinary record of the lacrosse team revealed that:

- There were 56 lacrosse players involved in 36 separate incidents over the past three academic years, most of them involving alcohol.
- While lacrosse players comprise .75 percent of the Duke undergraduate population of 6,244, they were responsible for 33 percent of the open container cases, 25 percent of the disorderly conduct cases and 21 percent of the alcohol-unsafe behavior cases.
- In the 2004-05 academic year, the Office of Judicial Affairs handled 97 non-academic misconduct cases, and 11 of them (just over 11 percent) involved lacrosse players.

According to the report, sophomores were largely responsible for lacrosse's poor behavior record; and by all measures, the disciplinary record of the team was noticeably worse than any other Duke team. Only two members of the school's soccer team and four baseball players were arrested in the same three-year span. But the nature of the incidents, the report noted, was not significantly different.

"Bad alcohol-related behavior seems to be reinforced rather than mitigated by the group," the report stated. "Responsible senior leadership seems to have been too often missing.

"The negative aspects of lacrosse cohesion is a serious problem that requires resolution."

Athletic director Joe Alleva warned Pressler last year that the players were out of control, that his team was "under the microscope" and that he needed "to get them in line."

The report concluded, "Although the pattern of misconduct in recent years by the lacrosse team is alarming, the evidence reviewed ... does not warrant suspension of the sport."

More than half of the players, coaches and administrators interviewed for this story used the phrase "play hard, party hard" to describe the culture of college lacrosse.

"Fearless or reckless," Starsia says. "Yes, those are words that can both apply. They can be guilty of sowing wild oats a bit in college -- that may be accurate. Lax [lacrosse] has always had a play-hard, party-hard description.

"I've always felt like lax guys are the most engaging guys in the whole world. Maybe they drink too much on weekends, but you can slap them around on Mondays -- they will listen to you."

According to the Harvard School of Public Health's highly regarded college alcohol survey, two of the greatest predictors of heavy drinking are participation in fraternities or sororities and intercollegiate athletics.


AP Photo/Sara D. Davis
Did Duke's Collin Finnerty, right, appearing in court with his father, step over the behavior line?The 1999 study, which defined binge drinking as five or more drinks consumed in a row at least once in a two-week period, found that 29 percent of athletes were frequent binge drinkers, compared to 22 percent of non-athletes. Frequent binge drinkers, according to the study, are up to five times more likely to experience a range of problems, including antisocial behavior.


Goldstein argues that lacrosse is no different from hockey or football -- or even biochemistry.

"After a three-hour exam, a bunch of us in my fraternity were involved in drinking games. ... They felt the same pressure building up and wanted to let it out," he said.

College athletics, with its driven and aggressive personalities, can be a difficult arena. More than a dozen teams recently have come under scrutiny for alleged hazing incidents after BadJocks.com posted pictures on its Web site. The Northwestern University women's soccer team was suspended indefinitely earlier this month. The 2004 University of California at Santa Barbara women's lacrosse team, the 2006 Catholic University women's lacrosse team and the 2003 and 2004 Michigan men's lacrosse teams also had alleged hazing incidents exposed by BadJocks.com. A recent Alfred University survey found that 80 percent of college athletes have been hazed.

While the numbers support the general impression that many college students abuse alcohol, the anonymous Ivy League player said that a serious commitment to Division I athletics, coupled with a challenging academic workload, creates enormous pressure.

"From my experience, the play-hard, party-hard label is true," he says. "But the whole deal is hard work. We're not taking Golf 101 at Florida State. You get up at 9 in the morning and go lift, eat breakfast, go watch film, go to class all day, practice for three hours, get dinner, do your homework and try to get to bed at a decent hour.

"In college, you're under constant pressure to hold your spot -- on the lacrosse team and academically, too. And after a big win on Saturday, you're ready to blow off some steam. You're there with your teammates, and everyone wants to be part of the fun."

Says Shay, "Personally, we're trying to recruit away from those party-hard players. You see it at some of the great tournaments in Lake Placid [N.Y.] or Ocean City [Md.]. College kids and post-college kids get together to relive old times. It's not just about the games, but the time spent in bars, too. That certainly doesn't help [in] calming the culture down.

"I don't know if you do."

The empirical evidence
In the early 1990s, Northeastern University's Center for the Study of Sport in Society was an exciting place to be for those curious to learn about sports' place in the larger arena of life. Under the direction of Richard Lapchick, researchers Jeff Benedict and Todd Crosset examined the relationship between athletes and sexual assault.

From 1991-93, they reviewed 107 cases of sexual assault reported at 30 Division I schools. They discovered that athletes made up 3.3 percent of the student population, but accounted for 19 percent of the assaults and 35 percent of the domestic violence incidents.


Dartmouth grad Andrew Goldstein doesn't want the Duke situation to tarnish the sport.While the study wasn't definitive -- the sample was too small -- it is one of the few examples of scholarship available on the subject.


"Athletes are represented disproportionately. That was obvious," says Benedict, a lawyer and author of "Public Heroes, Private Felons: Athletes and Crimes Against Women." "It was published in academic journals. We didn't go too far out on a limb to make it more than it was."

Today, Crosset is an associate professor in the University of Massachusetts' Department of Sports Management.

"I think what the Duke case points out, from the evidence we have, is the culture of the team. That's the biggest lesson we can pull out of all this research," Crosset says. "If there is peer support, you're more likely to [behave badly]. If someone feels comfortable shouting [racist and sexually charged remarks] at a stripper, that's a problem. If hatred on that level becomes fun for folks, they're more likely to engage in it."

Lapchick, now the director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida as well as a regular commentator on issues of diversity in sport for ESPN.com, has studied the behavior of athletes for years.

"There is a mentality among athletes that 'We can get away with this, that no one is going to challenge us because we are student-athletes,'" Lapchick once said in response to the Benedict-Crosset study.

According to Lapchick, in recent years, there have been roughly 100 sexual assault cases each year involving college and professional athletes.

"Every week, on average, we read about two cases in the media, and that builds momentum in people's minds," Lapchick says. "But in a country where 3 million women are battered every year and there are some 800,000 rapes, even if you assume the athletes' incidents are underreported, even at 10 to 1, it's still a small number, relatively speaking.

"It's the phenomenon of men in America that has created this culture of license and feeling that somehow they can do things to women that are illegal and immoral. But in terms of athletes and this license, I would say there is not a direct correlation."

Stenersen, who played midfield on two national championship teams for North Carolina, says he is not aware of any empirical data that suggests lacrosse players are any more socially active or irresponsible than other athletes. Further, he rejects the notion that the social attitudes surrounding Duke lacrosse were consistent with other lacrosse programs.

"I don't know that," Stenersen says. "I don't think we should assume that. One culture does not define college men's lacrosse. I believe, honestly, that each program is different. There's a big difference between the lacrosse culture at Duke and what the overall culture is."

" I never thought this sport was reckless or crazy. I think people are just grasping at things to throw at the sport. When the game is played the right way, it's pure and a pretty awesome spectacle. "
 Steve Koudelka, head coach at Lynchburg College
One recent study, published this year, was authored by Gordon B. Forbes, Alexis H. Pakalka and Kay B. White of Millikin University in Decatur, Ill., and Leah E. Adams-Curtis of Illinois Central College. The authors researched self-reported dating aggression and sexual coercion cases in 147 college men.

The conclusion: Men who participated in aggressive high school sports, as compared to other men, engaged in more physical and psychological aggression and sexual coercion toward their dating partners, were more accepting of violence, had more sexist attitudes and hostility toward women, were more accepting of rape myths and were less tolerant of homosexuality.

Derek Kreager of the Department of Sociology at the University of Washington notes in "Unnecessary Roughness? School Sports, Peer Networks and Male Adolescent Violence" that " ... masculinized sports are socially sanctioned stepping stones toward privilege and power, sites where coaches, peers and parents foster aggression as a means of achieving team success while simultaneously increasing the likelihood of off-the-field violence."

Crosset, citing the previous alcohol-related offenses of the Duke lacrosse players, says accountability is an important factor in the equation.

"There is an inherent hypocrisy in terms of meting out justice," Crosset says. "We have a young man [Finnerty] who has already been let off by a judge. It's interesting that he was allowed to play. Athletes should be responsible for their actions in a number of spheres."

Steve Koudelka, the men's lacrosse coach at Lynchburg College, a program ranked in the top 10 in Division III, said he doesn't understand the perceived connection between his sport and off-the-field violence.

"I never thought this sport was reckless or crazy," Koudelka says. "I think people are just grasping at things to throw at the sport. When the game is played the right way, it's pure and a pretty awesome spectacle."

A teachable moment
Lacrosse has produced many positive numbers, too.

According to U.S. Lacrosse's 2005 participation survey, there are more than 200,000 kids ages 15 and under playing the sport in America -- that's more than double the number in 2000. Overall, the sport has enjoyed 10 percent growth each year for the past decade, making it the fastest-growing sport in that time period.

Last year's Division I final between Johns Hopkins and Duke drew 44,920 spectators at Lincoln Financial Field, marking the second-largest crowd (to the Division I men's basketball title game) among all NCAA championships.

According to the NCAA, lacrosse registered the highest graduation success rate among all Division I intercollegiate sports: 89 percent for men and 94 percent for women.

The Duke lacrosse team, according to the school's internal report, graduated 100 percent of its players over the last five years. In 2005, 27 team members made the Atlantic Coast Conference's academic honor roll, more than any other ACC lacrosse team.


AP Photo/Gerry Broome
Just after his arrest, Duke's David Evans stood up for himself and for his teammates.At the highest levels, college lacrosse is still dominated by players from privileged backgrounds. Reade Seligmann and Finnerty, two of the Duke players charged with rape, graduated from Delbarton School in Morristown, N.J., and Chaminade High School on Long Island, respectively; and both grew up in million-dollar homes. On May 15, a third player, co-captain David Evans, was charged with the same three offenses as his Duke teammates.


"I am innocent. Reade Seligmann is innocent. Collin Finnerty is innocent," Evans said outside the court house after his arrest. "Every member of the Duke University lacrosse team is innocent. You have all been told some fantastic lies and I look forward to seeing them unravel in the weeks to come."

On the Duke roster, there are five graduates each from Delbarton and from Landon School in Bethesda, Md., prestigious private schools. Other players attended similar institutions such as Georgetown Prep, Durham Academy and Potomac School.

Starsia was a public high school player before he matriculated to Brown University. He vehemently rejects the portrait of privilege painted in the media.

"That is a past-tense issue for our sport," says Starsia, whose Cavaliers won the national title in 1999 and 2003. "Those are tired generalizations that are easy to use because they serve the argument people are trying to make: rich versus poor, men versus women. More and more athletes are coming from the public schools."

The rising number of youths playing the game and the swift spread of lacrosse to the country's West and South regions suggests that this trend will continue. There is a general feeling that the Duke scandal will have little effect on the game's growth.

"I think it's hurt the perception of lacrosse," says Rich Heritage, president of the Connecticut-New York Youth Lacrosse Association. "But I don't know that it impacts the sport too dramatically at the youth level."

For Koudelka, the episode brings one positive aspect to the fore: It is, as college faculty like to say, a teachable moment.

"Every coach in America has sat down with his kids and talked about this," Koudelka says. "I think compared to the time I was in school -- I graduated from college in 1993 -- there's a lot more education with these student-athletes. This is definitely worthy of talking about and using it as an educational tool."

"A huge lesson that comes out of this for all college athletes is that when you take on responsibility and privilege, what you do reflects on all of the involved institutions, in this case both Duke and lacrosse," says A. Craig Brown, vice chair of the U.S. Lacrosse executive committee. "Kids need to take more responsibility for the consequences of bad behavior. I'm sure none of them thought whatever they did that Monday night would have this effect. It's a recipe for disaster."

Greg Garber is a senior writer for ESPN.com
 
G

Guest

Guest
I wish they would look into the major division 1 football and basketball programs and give us the stats on those sports...I am sure they dwarf all the lacrosse allegations. This is a sports journalist's dream...to be able to report on alleged crime and illegal activity within a major college campus without having to worry about race being a factor.
 
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It's almost a month since my last post on this subject. In that time, the case has become more unsupportable with every passing day. Most of the legal shows have turned against the DA after eagerly supporting him initially.

Several black members of the punditocracy are still praising Nifong, "Bring it to trial," they demand. When informed that there is no evidence, they say,"let the jury decide. Nifong wouldn't do this unless he was sure of his case."

Well, what are Nifong's motives? Is it Tom Wolfe's "Great White Defendant?" This was the media's motive at the start. Perhaps Nifong sees himself as a term Don used, the White Martyr. Or maybe he is a legal version of Bobby Bowden.
 

White Shogun

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I think Nifong painted himself into a corner to win the election, and is now stuck with a stinking mess of a case that he knows he should not pursue. Having said that, I have no doubt that a black or pre-dominately black jury will convict the Duke boys of rape, no matter how little evidence there is to actually support such a charge, nor how large is the mountain of evidence against it.

If North Carolina allows bench trials, these men would be better off seeking a trial before a judge rather than in front of their 'peers.' Their only hope is to have the trial moved to another location because of jury prejudice.
 

C Darwin

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Article from Farrakahn's Website (finalcall)

Duke rape victim allegedly offered $2 million to recant charges
By Cash Michaels
The Wilmington Journal
Updated Jul 6, 2006, 01:12 pm Email this article
Printable page

DURHAM, N.C. (NNPA) - The cousin of the alleged victim in the Duke University lacrosse rape case says "alums of Duke" quietly offered the accuser lots of moneyâ€â€a staggering $2 millionâ€â€early on to drop the charges, and go on with her life.

"She told me they wanted her to make the case go away," Jakki (she will not reveal her last name in order to protect her family), the designated family spokesperson, told The Carolinian and Wilmington Journal newspapers in an exclusive interview.

However, Jakki adds that her younger cousin, the Black woman at the center of the nation's most controversial criminal case, refused because she insists that she was indeed beaten and sodomized by the three indicted White Duke lacrosse team membersâ€â€Colin Finnerty, Reade Seligmann and David Evansâ€â€each charged with first-degree rape, first-degree sexual assault and first-degree kidnapping.

"It's not about the money to her," Jakki says. "It's about her [being] brutally raped, sodomized, called a 'n----r.' Can you imagine being choked and held down? The thought of itâ€â€it reminds me of slavery days when the women were brutally raped by the mastersâ€â€makes me furious because they want to make these [Duke players] out to be golden boys."

The alleged victim told her family the trial must proceed, and she wants justice done. Because she remains in seclusion, the alleged victim could not be reached for comment.

Sam Hall, communications director for Duke University Alumni Affairs, said that after checking with other officials at the university about the "alums of Duke" allegation: "We have no information about that. I think there's been a rumor of it since the beginning, but I've never heard it discussed."

However, other sources have confirmed that early in the case, Black leaders, whose names cannot be revealed, were also allegedly approached by persons concerned about the fallout of the Duke rape controversy, and offered sums of money for themselves, NCCU and the alleged victim, if they could influence her to retract her allegations.

Those sources told The Wilmington Journal that those leaders flatly refused the offer.

Known publicly more for performing the night of the alleged assault as an exotic dancer, than the 27-year-old mother of two, second-year honor student at North Carolina Central University (NCCU), and one-time U.S. Navy enlistee, the alleged victim has even rejected financial offers of assistance from caring supporters other than family and close friends, Jakki says, because she doesn't want even the slightest hint of an appearance that she is pressing her rape claims against three indicted members of the Duke lacrosse team to profit in any way.

She has even, since the very beginning, rejected offers from churches and community organizations to set up a fund to help her continue to provide for herself and her children through the ordeal, despite constant requests from supporters across the nation to have such a vehicle established. Many have also sent inquiries where to make a contribution through www.ourheartsworld.com, the community-based website set up to emotionally and spiritually support the alleged victim. They were told there was no fund officially set, but would be informed when there was.

The Wilmington Journal has confirmed that an NCCU student organization that collected thousands of dollars to donate to the woman could not get her to take it, and is still holding on to the money.

Reverend Jesse Jackson publicly offered to pay her college tuition through his Rainbow/PUSH organization, and the NC NAACP has had several discussions with the family about setting up a fund. All efforts got a polite "Thanks, but no thanks," but apparently many of the alleged victim's most vocal critics are unaware of her unflinching stand.

Given that the trial will not begin until next spring, Jakki agrees that, at some point, some fundraising may very well be needed. In fact, Jakki revealed, despite several inaccurate major media reports, it was only recently that the family finally convinced her younger cousin to indeed hire an attorney. She has also had to separate from her children for a while, and is struggling to maintain her health.

Since the story broke three months ago about how she was allegedly beaten, kicked, strangled and sodomized at a wild off-campus party given by the Duke lacrosse team on March 13, the alleged victim had lost a lot of weight, been very fearful, cut her hair and had developed stomach ulcersâ€â€all a result not only of the alleged assault and associated trauma, but the unexpected avalanche of national and international press coverage.

Jakki noted that her cousin never sought out the press. "This has been traumatic for her. Not only was she raped that night, but she's being raped over and over every day, every night on some channel, in some newspaper."

Jakki confirmed reports of her cousin and her young children having to move around constantly in the beginning because of "Die n----r" death threats and probing media cameras. Sometimes it would be out of town; other times out of state, with the District Attorney's assistance, for protection.

For "a brief second" because of the mounting pressure, Jakki said, her cousin considered backing out of the case. After the third indictment and the extraordinary press conference suspect David Evans held, something Jakki called "a very well directed production," the threats on her embattled cousin "really got bad."

It was as if she, the alleged victim, was being hunted, the one being indicted for a crime. Things have improved in recent weeks, Jakki says. Her cousin is eating better now, putting back on some weight, and has strengthened her resolve to go forward.

© Copyright 2006 FCN Publishing, FinalCall.com
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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here's an excellent summation of the facts thus far in the "case"... copied directly off this link.

When The Law Is An Ass 6/07/2006
Like most of you, we have followed the lacrosse case with grave concern. We have generally declined to take a stand on the question of guilt or innocence, because until all the evidence is in the public arena, we can't know for sure what to think. But what can be and should be commented on is the conduct of the prosecution. This case is made for the media age, with a devastating combination of race, sex and privilege, but it also underscores the dangers of an out of control prosecutor who shoots from the hip.

The whole thing has become fairly sprawling, so it might be good to go back and review a bit. We've broken it down into three major categories: Evidence, Witnesses, and District Attorney Mike Nifong's behavior.

The evidence

There is significant evidence that has been disclosed to the public that tends to contradict or undercut the claim of rape. Of course this does not necessarily mean that a rape could not have taken place, though, since not everything is publicly known yet.

The time-stamped photos taken at the party. The photos show the dancers at various points during the evening's events. The photo also shows the accuser returning, with a smile, apparently after the point-in-time when she was supposedly raped, and apparently shows some bruises before the time of the alleged rape. Here is a chronology of the photos taken from the Duke Chronicle.

12:02 a.m. - A time-stamped photo provided by defense attorneys shows women dancing in front of the lacrosse players.
12:03 a.m. - Another photo shows both dancers leaving the party.
12:03 a.m.-12:30 a.m. - There is a 27-minute gap where no photos were taken.
12:30 a.m. - A time-stamped photo shows the alleged victim, wearing only one shoe, rifling through her purse and apparently smiling on the back porch of 610 N. Buchanan Blvd.
12:37 a.m. - A photo shows the woman lying on her side on the porch, apparently passed out.
12:41 a.m. - A photo shows the woman sitting in the passenger seat of a car with the door open.

The alibi. Reade Seligmann presents a fairly compelling argument that he could not have been there during the time of the alleged rape. There is a 27 minute period when no pictures were taken, from 12:03 to 12:30. Seligmann made two calls, one at 12:07 a.m., and the other at 12:14 a.m., according to phone records. Sometime in the next 10 minutes, before 12:24, a cab driven by Moezeldin Almostafa (aka Moez Mostafa) picked him up. They arrived at a Wachovia - presumably on 9th Street - and then Almofasta took them to a Cook-Out restaurant. Seligmann says he has receipts for both transactions. Duke can also identify the time when his card was swiped at the door of his dorm, which was 12:46 a.m.

The date rape drug suggestion. When we first heard that "a source close to the investigation" suggest that a date rape drug may have been used, it was a disturbing suggestion, and it almost made sense. However, if the alleged victim were drugged, she certainly couldn't have fought back as ferociously as she claimed she did, and likely wouldn't have remembered much, either. It is possible, of course, that she was drugged and the rape took place before the drug kicked in, but Roberts says the alleged victim was intoxicated before any assault took place. However, when the police arrived at Kroger's and found the alleged victim in the car, Sgt. J.C. Shelton said that while she did appear unconscious, that when he used an ammonia capsule to awaken her, she "began mouth breathing, which is a sign that she was not really unconscious."

"My experience is that unconscious people wake up rather quickly when exposed to ammonia capsules," Shelton said.

And when he tried to remove her from the car, she held onto the parking brake to keep from being pulled out. She refused to give her name or address, so Shelton directed that she be taken to a mental health/substance abuse center for observation. At this point she said that she had been raped at 610 N. Buchanan, and Shelton had her taken to Duke University Medical Center.

The lineup. The Durham authorities gave the alleged victim photos of only lacrosse players - an act which may not stand up in court. Justice Department guidelines on using photo identifications call for "using a photo array that includes only one suspect and at least five 'fillers,' or other people who generally fit the witness' description of the perpetrator, for each array." That clearly did not happen. And defense attorneys allege that there was another examination of photos which Nifong did not voluntarily share.

The DNA. Nifong was going to build his case on the DNA tests, which failed to link any member of the lacrosse team to the alleged attack. And one prominent local attorney said that in his judgment, because asking people who were not suspects for their DNA constituted an unreasonable search and seizure, it would have been tossed out of court anyway.

And as it turned out, recent DNA was found, but was allegedly from her boyfriend - though she allegedly also had sex with two of her drivers (we're assuming they dropped her off at her appointments).

The polygraph. David Evans offered to take a polygraph for Nifong, who refused the offer. He then took it on his own and was judged to be truthful. Polygraphs are not admissible in court, but they do give prosecutors a chance to ask suspects highly invasive questions. For some reason, Nifong declined the opportunity to ask Evans intrusive questions about the evening's events.

The Witnesses

The Accuser

The accuser has some serious issues with her account and her credibility.

Her criminal record. It's well-known by now that after giving a taxi driver a lap dance, she stole his keys and took his car and was accused of trying to run over a police officer. She was convicted on four charges: Speeding to elude arrest, assault against a government official, DWI level 3, and larceny. She served no jail time.

As a witness. Her criminal record aside, in this case she said, among other things, that she was raped by 20 men, before saying that it was actually three, and that the other dancer was in the bathroom at the time (Roberts called that "a crock"). She also apparently said that the men did not use condoms, which would, one would think, make DNA more readily available.

At the hospital, the woman recanted her rape accusation, telling Sgt. Shelton of the Durham Police Department that she had been pulled from the vehicle (apparently Roberts' Honda) and groped but not raped (there is no indication anywhere that Roberts backs the pulled/groping allegations).

When Shelton asked her if she had or had not been raped, she cried and told him she didn't want to talk to him anymore. She also apparently told Shelton that she had been dragged into the bedroom rather than the bathroom.

Previous allegation of gang rape. In 1996, she reported that three years earlier, at age 14, she had reported being raped by three men, but when police asked for more information in that case, she declined to follow up. Her mother said she was in therapy following the alleged incident.

She also accused her former husband of trying to kill her but never showed up for the hearing, and so the charges were dropped.

Kim Roberts

Kim Roberts has credibility issues as well.

Her criminal record. As a convicted embezzler, Roberts is certain to have her character impeached. Her problems following the terms of her probation won't help either (she failed to pay restitution and left the state, both violations of her probation).

The first 911 call. Although she didn't identify herself, the caller was Roberts, who, in the course of one call, had herself driving a car, then walking, then parking. She repeatedly mentioned the address of the house, which couldn't be seen from the street. She admitted she purposely obscured her identity and her knowledge of anything which might have happened that evening. All sides agree that racial insults were hurled. The defense will argue that this was why Roberts made this call and will use it to, again, to attack her credibility.

The PR E-mail. Roberts acknowledges sending this e-mail:

Sent: Wednesday, April 19, 2006 2:21 PM

To: Ronn Torossian

Subject: duke lacrosse scandal

Hi!

My name is Kim and I am involved in the Duke Lacrosse scandal. Although I am no celebrity and just an average citizen, I've found myself in the center of one of the biggest stories in the country. I'm worried about letting this opportunity pass me by without making the best of it and was wondering if you had any advice as to how to spin this to my advantage. I am determined not to let any negative publicity about my life overtake me. I'm so confused as to who to talk to for relevant advice and I hope that you can return my e-mail. If you cannot help, do you know of any names and numbers I can call?

Thanks for your time


Again, her credibility will be hammered over this and her motives will be questioned, just as she will be intensely grilled about the first 911 call. There may well be other witnesses for the prosecution, but the two dancers are going to get hit hard by the defense.


Mike Nifong's Role


Prosecutorial Ethics

Clearly, the prosecutor's case has some serious weaknesses. But questions of evidence pale compared to questions about ethics, and Nifong's performance has raised some serious ethical concerns.

Robert Hines, a Duke-trained attorney, points out the following:

Rule 3.8(f) of the NC Rules of Professional Conduct deals with the responsibilities of a prosecutor and states the following:
The prosecutor in a criminal case shall:

(f) except for statements that are necessary to inform the public of the nature and extent of the prosecutor's action and that serve a legitimate law enforcement purpose, refrain from making extrajudicial comments that have a substantial likelihood of heightening public condemnation of the accused and exercise reasonable care to prevent investigators, law enforcement personnel, employees or other persons assisting or associated with the prosecutor in a criminal case from making an extrajudicial statement that the prosecutor would be prohibited from making under this Rule.

According to attorney Jason Trumpbour, also a Duke grad,

Without getting into too detailed of a bill of particulars, he has violated, not one but likely, several ethical rules. There is little doubt at this point as to his egregious and systematic violation of the rule against publicly commenting on matters likely to be tried in court. Not only is he tainting the jury pool by trying the case in the media, he is using the opportunity to do so to make arguments to the jury pool that he could not make in court. Calling the defendants 'hooligans,' suggesting that innocent people do not need lawyers and inviting the inference of guilt from the silence of the accused are things that would bring instant and vigorous rebuke if uttered in open court and could potentially be grounds for mistrial or contempt of court.

The preamble to the rules of ethics used in North Carolina states that Lawyers should 'cultivate knowledge of the law beyond its use for clients, employ that knowledge in reform of the law, and work to strengthen legal education.' Although this is established as an ideal rather than a rule, it, nevertheless, provides another lens through which to these arguments. By making these sorts of arguments and generally acting as a demagogue, Nifong has done the opposite. He has spread misinformation about the law and sought to undermine its most cherished values, such as the equality of all persons before the law, the right to and importance of assistance of counsel and that the accused should be tried in a manner that respects their fundamental rights. Such statements also bring the profession into disrepute.


Witness Manipulation

Then there are things which may later prove to be unethical, or worse, but at an absolute minimum, miserably fail the smell test.

First, there is the deal with Kim Roberts. A convicted embezzler, she was excused from having to pay a 15% bonding fee. Shortly afterward, her testimony changed.

It's entirely possible, of course, that there is no connection between A and B, but you'll forgive us for being dubious. It's one thing for her to change her story if it goes from being false to true, but another entirely if she changes it from true to false to get a good deal and to make the prosecutor happy.

It's also entirely possible that the cab driver who provided Reade Seligmann's alibi was picked up by Durham police on old shoplifting charges coincidentally, but he claimed that they asked him if he had anything else to say about the lacrosse case. When he said no, he says they took him in. The suggestion here, of course, is that if he had had "something else to say," they wouldn't have taken him in.

We found out something interesting and unsettling about this: in North Carolina, if you are convicted of a crime, a prosecutor can disqualify your testimony in a trial. So it's not simply about intimidation, but rather a way to shoot down part of Reade Seligmann's alibi. Nice.


Misstatements, Machinations, and Lies

Nifong's performance in many respects has been abysmal.

His media comments have been unethical at best and could play a significant role in sending three young men who have the right to be presumed innocent, and who may in fact be innocent, to prison for years.
He called the team "a bunch of hooligans," which is prejudicial, to say the least.
Suggesting that the right to remain silent is indicative of guilt is disgusting.
Suggesting that they wouldn't need lawyers if they were innocent is beneath contempt, and any first-year law student - really, anyone who has seen a half-dozen TV law dramas - would know better.
During a campaign season in a city notorious for politics which split on racial fault lines, he appeared at an event at N.C. Central and took questions on the case. The New Black Panther Party, a profoundly anti-semitic group with the sort of violent rhetoric that recalls the early days of the Nazi's Brownshirts, claims that he met with them and discussed the case, something we haven't seen refuted anywhere, by Nifong or anyone else.
However, Nifong has not only refused to meet with defense attorneys - many of whom he has known for a decade or more - he has refused to even consider possible exculpatory evidence.
Nifong initially suggested that he would build his case around DNA evidence, but when that fell through, he suggested that the suspects might have used condoms - when he knew the alleged victim said during her rape exam that they didn't. Assuming that that is factually correct, Nifong had to know that she said that, and when he said that they may have used condoms, he was, in fact, simply lying.
The comments about a date rape drug were illogical on their face (since she had a pretty distinct recollection of the alleged incident and said she fought back), but since it appears that neither Nifong nor the police requested a toxicology test, he surely knew that comments from "a source close to the investigation" about the use of a sedative could not be proven. Quite simply, this is another lie, and an attempt to spin the media.
The attempt to interrogate players in their dorm room, without checking with their attorneys, as required by law, and the attempt to search without a warrant, was a shocking abuse of power.
During the investigation, a controversial e-mail came from the address of a team member which told teammates that he planned to tell authorities that a crime had been committed and that he knew who had done it and would turn them in. The young man denied that he had sent it, and defense attorneys believe that it was an attempted setup by police, who wanted to make the lacrosse team members nervous. The e-mail bore the subject "sorry guys" in the subject line, and contained this message: "I am going to go to the police tomorrow to tell them everything that I know." The player said he was in class at the time the message was sent, although he still could have sent it from any number of wireless devices. But the source of the e-mail should be traceable. The police surely had his password and had the means and opportunity to cause mischief.
The arrest of the cab driver, Moezeldin Almostafa, as we said previously, is a tactic to defuse Seligmann's alibi. But on another level, it is simple witness intimidation: Almostafa is an immigrant, and could face possible deportation over this. On a purely tactical level, it's a logical move, but the two levels of Nifong's ruthlessness on display here are chilling.
Public Posturing & Electioneering

What could possibly justify this sort of behavior? As far as we can see, without delving into psychoanalysis, only one thing: the election.

In Durham, the reality is that a black candidate in the field usually gets no less than 40% of the vote, and with former prosecutorial rival Freda Black in as well, Nifong was in real trouble. The case gave him the opportunity to appeal to black voters, which he did successfully enough to win the election.

Unfortunately, it came at a significant social cost for Durham, a huge hit for Duke's image, and most critically, at the expense of a number of people who were, even Nifong agrees, entirely innocent, and three young men who may be innocent as well. People's lives have been destroyed over this.

It's certainly possible, as we said earlier, that there is some evidence which has yet to be released which will change the dynamic radically. As Nifong points out, correctly, the defense will discuss those things which are to their advantage but not things which hurt their cause.

Everyone should bear that in mind. And any decent person, most of all we would hope any Duke fan, would not want anyone who committed such awful crimes as are alleged in this case to go free. We are not so blindly loyal to Duke that we would have guilty men walk away from such crimes. If the evidence in court proves they are guilty, we would hope for significant punishments.

And we should also remember that while the lacrosse players may well be innocent, they are hardly innocents. They have behaved boorishly in many respects, from drinking like pigs to copulating recklessly in an era when that can get you killed, and to round off treating women like sh*t, hiring strippers and allegedly making lurid suggestions about broomsticks as substitute phalluses. And then there were the racist comments which no one denies took place.

But these are acts of sotten louts, of piggish, stupid boys who have no concept of behaving like grown men, and while they carry consequences, they don't send you to jail for these things.

Nonetheless, jail looms as a distinct threat. But if they go to jail, they are still entitled to a fair trial first. At this point, given the way Nifong has exercised his powers, a fair trial seems a long shot.


The Real Threat

If the shaky evidence, the witness manipulation and the lies turn out to be merely a way for Nifong to gain elected office at the expense of young men who made stupid decisions and who exposed themselves to considerable risk, he deserves to be not just disbarred but to be indicted, because if that's what's happened here, his behavior is not just stupidly aggressive and unethical, it's criminal. And as horrible a crime as rape is, it is not nearly as dangerous as an instrument of the law who will not himself submit to it.

And although the tendency for many people, unfortunately, is to say that well, it's just a bunch of rich white boys from Duke and their mommies and daddies will bail them out, why would anyone think an out-of-control prosecutor would limit his abuses to people who can actually fight back?

Nifong may have used this case to get the black vote in Durham, but anyone who trusts this man not to turn this sort of abuse against the powerless is out of their minds. If you think the pattern we're seen here will be limited to prominent defendants, you need to reconsider, and quickly.

We're willing to bet that there are a lot of people in jail in Durham who have been there for weeks and months but who lack the resources of the Seligmann's, the Finnerty's, and the Evans's, and who cannot make bail. Moreover, if statistics bear out, many if not most of them will be African-American.

They may or may not be guilty as charged, but Nifong has shown a willingness to bend the facts - and the law - to suit his needs. If he needs a conviction, the current case suggests he'll do whatever he has to do to get it - and Fox News, CourtTV - they'll be nowhere in sight.

And while false allegations of crimes will always be with us, we're also concerned that the inevitable reaction to the overtly public trial-by-media employed by lawyers on both sides of the case may discourage rape victims from coming forward in the future, and that's a devastating side effect of what's happening here.

However, the public nature of the legal argument was started by Nifong. Once he started down that path, the defense attorneys were allowed (and indeed obliged) to answer in kind. Had he behaved properly, the defense could not have responded in the way that they have.

Perhaps the whole situation is summed up best by Kenneth Callahan, a judge from Ohio who wrote a guest column recently for the Durham Herald-Sun (the article unfortunately is not online). He emphasizes the following:

"A moral human being does not create racial divisions for personal gain."
"No candidate for office should make an ongoing investigation part of his campaign speeches."
Quoting from the American Bar Association Standards for Criminal Justice: "The responsibility of a public prosecutor differs from that of the usual advocate; his duty is to seek justice, not merely convict."
Mike Nifong is a danger to anyone who finds themselves in the criminal justice system in Durham County. He has shown a disregard for the law and for his ethical responsibilities, and in fact has become an enemy of justice rather than an enforcer of justice.

Someone else can handle the case and ensure a fair and honest outcome, something which everyone wants. Let them.

As for Nifong, in our opinion, his behavior has been egregious and should be investigated by the state bar association and by the Justice Department, and the sooner the better.



*****


The timeline, as printed by the Chronicle:

11:30 p.m. - Approximate time, according to a Durham police warrant, of the two exotic dancers' arrival at 610 N. Buchanan Blvd.
11:50 p.m. - Neighbor Jason Bissey told the Raleigh News and Observer that he saw two women walk to the back of the house, where they were greeted by a man.
12:00 a.m. - Bissey sees the two women enter the house.
12:02 a.m. - A time-stamped photo provided by defense attorneys shows women dancing in front of the lacrosse players.
12:03 a.m. - Another photo shows both dancers leaving the party.
12:03 a.m.-12:30 a.m. - There is a 27-minute gap where no photos were taken.
12:07, 12:14 a.m. - Phone bills indicate two outgoing calls are made from sophomore Reade Seligmann's cell phone. Seligmann was arrested April 19 and charged with first degree forcible rape, first degree sexual offense and first degree kidnapping.
Sometime before 12:24 a.m. - A taxi driver has said in a written statement that he picked up Seligmann and a friend a block and a half away from the party.
12:24 a.m. - Seligmann's ATM card is used at a Wachovia bank. The taxi driver confirmed that he drove Seligmann and his friend to a bank and fast food restaurant before taking them to West Campus.
12:25 a.m. - Seligmann calls his girlfriend, another Duke sophomore, on his cell phone.
12:20 a.m.-12:30 a.m. - Bissey told the Durham Herald-Sun he saw the women leave the house during this period, only to try to go back inside to retrieve a missing shoe.
12:30 a.m. - A time-stamped photo shows the alleged victim, wearing only one shoe, rifling through her purse and apparently smiling on the back porch of 610 N. Buchanan Blvd.
12:37 a.m. - A photo shows the woman lying on her side on the porch, apparently passed out.
12:41 a.m. - A photo shows the woman sitting in the passenger seat of a car with the door open.
12:45 a.m.-1:00 a.m. - Bissey said he saw the two dancers leave in a car sometime during this time period. He said he saw one man standing adjacent to the East Campus wall, shout "Thank your grandpa for my nice cotton shirt." He added that he saw the players leave the residence shortly thereafter
12:46 a.m. - Seligmann's DukeCard is used to gain access to his Edens dormitory.
12:53 a.m. - The second dancer calls 911, saying white men who came out of 610 N. Buchanan yelled "******" at her from near the East Campus wall. Defense attorneys have questioned inconsistencies in the call - the caller first said she was driving, and later said she was walking when the slur was yelled.
12:55 a.m. - Durham Police Department officers arrive at a quiet 610 N. Buchanan Blvd. They saw there was evidence of a party, but nobody answered the door when the officers arrived.
1:22 a.m. - A female grocery clerk at a Kroger located on Hillsborough Road calls 911, saying "There's a lady in someone else's car, and she will not get out.... She's like, intoxicated, drunk or something." According to ABC News, the clerk later told a private investigator that, based on her encounter with the dancer that night. "There ain't no way she was raped."
1:30 a.m. - The police officer who came to respond to the Kroger call tells a dispatcher that the alleged victim does not need medical attention, adding, "She's not in distress. She's just passed-out drunk."
1:58 a.m. - An e-mail sent from the Duke account of sophomore lacrosse player Ryan McFadyen discusses hiring strippers and "killing the bitches"
 

Triad

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The Duke rape case gets more exposure this week on 60 Minutes (Sunday, Oct. 15 at 7 ET). Ed Bradley interviews the 2nd stripper and all three defendants.


60 minutes
 
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From what they say on the 60 Minutes site, this will be the biggest blow to the prosecutor's case yet. It is worth noting that the System Media hasn't paid much attention to this affair for the last few months. They seem to have lost their hopes for a conviction. Every reputable legal analyst has said that there is no case.

The blogs have had a major effect. When the NY Times tried to resurrect the prosecution, the blogs took the Times apart.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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as reported by MSNBC here
Duke rape case D.A. hasn't interviewed accuser</font></font>
Nifong has asked how she's doing but left investigation to police, he says
Wedenseday, October 27, 2006
Associated Press

DURHAM, N.C. - The district attorney prosecuting three Duke lacrosse players accused of raping a woman at a team party said during a court hearing Friday that he still hasn't interviewed the accuser about the facts of the case.

"I've had conversations with (the accuser) about how she's doing. I've had conversations with (the accuser) about her seeing her kids," Mike Nifong said. "I haven't talked with her about the facts of that night. ... We're not at that stage yet."

Nifong made the statement in response to a defense request for any statements the woman has made about the case.

"I understand the answer may not be the answer they want, but it's the true answer. That's all I can give them," the prosecutor said after the hour-long hearing.

Defense lawyers said outside court that they found Nifong's statement surprising.

"One of the most interesting things to me of course is Mr. Nifong did admit that he in fact has basically never talked to this woman and has absolutely no idea what her story is, and yet he has chosen to continue to go forward with this case," defense lawyer Joseph Cheshire said.

Nifong said none of his assistants have discussed the case with the woman either and only have spoken with her to monitor her well-being. They have left the investigation of the case to police, he said...
 

Bart

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Jimmy Chitwood said:
Nifong has asked how she's doing but left investigation to police, he says


That clown has got to be removed from his position. Why wouldn't he question her vigorously? He wanted to prosecute the boys and didn't want to risk finding out the woman's story was full of holes. The justice system is filled with anti-white weasels like him.
 

Triad

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Weasel is the perfect word for him, Bart.
 
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Most DAs never interview the accusers in a case.... However, they do if the case is questionable. They want to see if the accuser is credible. If not, they drop the case, for all DAs have heavy caseloads.
I think we know how gredible this accuser is.
 
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Nifong is definately busy. Durham has one of the highest crime rate in NC. Unfortunatley if he did his job the Durham Morning Herald and WTVD news would show lots of images of him prosecuting young black males who are obvioulsy victims of racism. And he is up re elections Nove. 7 in a predominately black city. And the Yankees insist we let hem vote.
 
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Triad said:
Weasel is the perfect word for him, Bart.


Personally, I prefer "smegma" as more fitting for him. If you don't know the definition, look it up, its a real hoot and suits him nicely. I'm sure you'll all agree as well.
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Bart

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[url]http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-duke14d ec14,1,6421689.story?track=rss[/url]


DURHAM, N.C. â€â€￾ A private lab used by prosecutors in the Duke University lacrosse rape case failed to disclose that it had found DNA from unidentified males in samples taken from the accuser's body and underwear, according to a defense motion filed Wednesday.

The DNA did not match samples taken from three Duke lacrosse players charged with raping an exotic dancer during an off-campus party March 14. Nor did it match DNA taken from 43 other members of the university lacrosse team, or the accuser's boyfriend, the defense motion said.


"This is strong evidence of innocence in a case in which the accuser denied engaging in any sexual activity in the days before the alleged assault," lawyers for the three accused players wrote in the 61-page motion.

The DNA â€â€￾ which the motion said came from "multiple males" â€â€￾ was not mentioned in the lab's final report, submitted to the Durham district attorney's office in May and subsequently provided to the defense


Edited by: Bart
 
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