As Duke rape case unravels, focus turns to prosecutor
Wed Dec 27, 8:22 AM ET
Last March, when a young black woman who had been hired to strip at a Duke University lacrosse team party accused three white players of raping her, the case became a national sensation. The instant storyline was one of jocks gone wild, with echoes of North Carolina's sorry racial past.
Today, the case is looking less like a vicious crime perpetrated by privileged athletes and more like an example of prosecutorial misconduct by the local district attorney. More broadly, its handling shows the danger in making snap judgments and should give pause to anyone who cares about fairness in the legal system.
It's possible, of course, that Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong has damning evidence that hasn't been disclosed publicly. But his record so far reflects these questionable actions:
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Rushing to judgment. When the case erupted nine months ago, Nifong shamelessly exploited the racially charged atmosphere in the middle of an election campaign, calling the accused "hooligans" and likening the incident to cross burnings. He obtained grand-jury indictments against three of the players. Then, on the Friday before Christmas, he abruptly dropped the rape charges after the accuser told investigators that she's no longer certain that she was penetrated by a penis, the legal definition of rape in North Carolina. Despite inconsistencies in the accuser's accounts, Nifong said he would pursue kidnapping and sexual offense charges that carry similarly severe penalties.
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Bringing charges based on flimsy evidence. The 28-year-old accuser has given several contradictory versions of the incident. She first told authorities that 20 men had raped her, then that no rape had occurred and finally that three men raped her.
Her identification of the men derived from a biased photo lineup that included only team members. At one point, she identified as an assailant a young man who wasn't even at the party. A fellow stripper initially told police the accuser's story was a "crock."
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Sitting on evidence. DNA tests turned up no link to the lacrosse players. The head of a lab retained to analyze DNA samples testified Dec. 8 that he and Nifong intentionally excluded from a report the finding that the accuser's clothes and body had DNA from other, unidentified males. Nifong had known of the complete DNA report for seven months and previously told a judge that he'd turned over all relevant evidence.
Even if the remaining charges are ultimately dropped - the next hearing is scheduled for Feb. 5 - the damage has been considerable. The three accused players face at least 12 years in prison. The lacrosse team's schedule was cancelled last season. The coach resigned. Duke's reputation was stained.
The school's lacrosse team isn't angelic. Some of its conduct - hiring strippers, underage drinking, use of racial slurs and crude e-mails - fueled the outrage. Lawyers for the accused players have been skillfully releasing evidence favorable to their clients and may be holding back less flattering information.
Even so, Nifong's performance raises so many troubling questions that it's time for the North Carolina Bar Association to investigate and for Nifong to step back from the case. If he won't go voluntarily, a judge should replace him.
Being a prosecutor doesn't mean simply trying to win convictions or blindly accepting the word of a troubled accuser. It means respecting the rights of defendants and setting aside political expediency. Most of all, it means seeking justice and the truth, even in a charged atmosphere where many have jumped to conclusions based on stereotypes.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/200...nstoprosecutor
Had this been three young black athletes facing the same situation, Jackson and Sharpton would have been all over this - and it would have been all about the "race card"...