Duke, DNA, and the Law: Politics Over Principle
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
The recent bonfire of accusations and stories in the case of the
Duke Lacrosse team either is reaching a fever pitch, or has descended
into the pit of the Theatre of the Absurd. Given the various people
involved in this bad morality play, I pick the latter. Yet, it also
tells us about the current state of law and politics in the United
States, and from what I see, it is bad news all around.
Of course, the original story was neatly packaged and is a perfect
setting for what modern (or postmodern) leftists have declared to
be the current state of our society. A black female exotic dancer
(which is a nice euphemism for a stripper) and a partner are paid
to "perform" at a party attended by a number of members
of the Duke University Lacrosse team. All of the players at the
party are white, and there is underage drinking – lots of underage
drinking – and things become rowdy. They start to use racial slurs
at the women, who now are frightened of the mob.
Soon, the intoxicated white boys start pawing at the dancer, who
becomes frightened. Suddenly, some of these drunken athletes pull
the woman into the bathroom, where they beat, choke, and then brutally
rape the dancer. She then leaves, goes to a 7-11 parking lot, the
police come by, hear her story, and then take her to a local hospital,
where someone says that her injuries are "consistent"
with rape, and then she goes to the police.
Thus, the story explodes. First, there are the obligatory "Take
Back the Night" candlelight vigils led by Duke University faculty
and students. After all, everyone knows that the story is
true. These are white, privileged jocks that always get away
with murder. It was just a matter of time before it became obvious
that athletes are a bunch of rapist misogynists, something that
everybody knows at places like Duke.
In the immediate aftermath, three athletes voluntarily go to the
police station without lawyers, give statements, and offer
to take lie detector tests. The police refuse to give tests, something
which should be the first hint that the people in "law enforcement"
think something is wrong with the "victim’s" story and
surely don’t want the evidence to get in the way of a good arrest
and conviction.
Second, the story further detonates. The athletes supposedly were
taunting local blacks, using racial slurs and the like. A 9-1-1
call goes to police, initiated by the dancer’s friend, and police
respond within two minutes. However, the caller’s story has a number
of inconsistencies, and when police check, there are no people in
the area, even though the incident had supposedly happened just
a couple minutes before. However, the accusation of racist taunts
leads the president of Duke University to apologize to the blacks
of Durham (which make up about 45 percent of the local population,
creating a volatile "town-and-gown" atmosphere between
the locals and preppy Duke) and puts the team’s season on hold.
From here, everything escalates at once. All but convicted in the
press and by their peers, faculty, and administration at Duke, not
to mention the entire black community of Durham, the players begin
to understand that no one is going to listen to them, so they hire
lawyers. This action inflames the accusers even more, and especially
their chief accuser, District Attorney Mike Nifong, who is in the
middle of a re-election campaign. A sordid email sent by one Lacrosse
player to another is picked up by the DA’s investigators, and that
is enough to have Duke’s president cancel the Lacrosse season and
fire the coach.
Nifong appears on ESPN for an interview in which he declares that
if the players are innocent, then they have no reason for having
lawyers. Thus, their hiring counsel is "proof" of their
guilt. However, Nifong does not mention the lie detector refusal,
which is not surprising. Nor does he mention that at the start,
all of the players cooperated, acceding to DNA tests, which Nifong
already had declared would "prove" that the players had
raped the woman. In the spirit of the lynch mob, ESPN published
an article telling how much prison time the young men would receive
if convicted.
Soon, the president of Duke condemns the players for hiring lawyers
(while spewing "innocent until proven guilty" out of the
side of his mouth, and not meaning a word of it), and faculty and
students follow suit. Signs like "Get a conscience, not a lawyer"
appear on campus, and no one – especially no one from the faculty
of Duke University Law School where they allegedly teach principles
of the law – objects publicly. The players have been accused, they
are male jocks, and, thus, they are guilty. Verdict first, trial
later!
What is happening at Duke is the inevitable result of the politicizing
of rape. Before the age of feminism, rape was a crime against an
individual, and the punishment for rape was severe. (Some
states even imposed capital punishment for rape, so no one can say
it was not taken seriously.) Today, however, rape is a crime
against women, which is another way of saying that it is a political
crime. Thus, the accusation of rape against someone is enough to
provoke endless political rallies, not to mention the immediate
pronouncement of guilt for the man or men accused.
(Wendy McElroy told me in a recent email that feminists actually
do not like DNA tests, since a large number of men have been found
to be wrongfully convicted of rape have had their convictions overturned.
She writes that feminists "are more dismissive of DNA than
you realize because it has too often contradicted the account rendered
by female rape victims. Namely, DNA testing has identified and released
from jail too many men who were wrongly identified by their alleged
victims. This weakens the argument that you should always believe
the woman.")
For all the talk of this being a "progressive" or "modern"
era, rape accusations today are as much a political tool by feminists
against men as they were against black men in the late 1800s and
early 1900s. In 1906, a white woman in Chattanooga accused a black
man named Ed Johnson of raping her, and he subsequently was arrested.
At the trial, according to the records, he had an alibi and her
testimony was less-than-convincing, but since she was white and
he was black, the "believe the white woman" syndrome was
very powerful, so the man was convicted and sentenced to hang.
He never made it to his official hanging. After Johnson’s attorneys
had convinced the U.S. Supreme Court to issue a stay of execution,
a mob broke into the Hamilton County Jail, took him to the Walnut
Street Bridge, and performed the execution themselves, performing
a brutal beating, hanging, and shooting on their own. (This case
would have a far-reaching impact on lynching, and has been thoroughly
researched since then.)
Today, we have what seems to be the opposite situation. Instead
of a lynch mob of enraged white men carrying torches, we have feminists
and their allies carrying candles and a DA telling local blacks
that he doesn’t need any evidence to indict, try, and convict someone
– someone – of rape. (By all accounts, the woman in question has
changed her story and there are a
number of inconsistencies to boot. However, the April 13 New
York Times reports that the DA plans to indict one or more
player.) People demand an indictment, trial, conviction, and lengthy
prison sentences, not because the investigators have found real
proof, but because the politics of modern feminism and race requires
it. Evidence? We don’t need no stinkin’ evidence!
Lest anyone think that I am defending the behavior of Duke’s Lacrosse
players that night, let me say that in some ways, these young men
brought on this situation. After all, it was they who decided to
have a party in which there was underage drinking (not that I support
such laws, but that does not change the fact of what they did) which
almost certainly would guarantee that a "boys going wild"
atmosphere would commence.
(Let’s face it; the Duke party was only a tiny microcosm of what
goes on at colleges across the country. Young people drink to excess
with sometimes tragic results – one of our students here at Frostburg
State University recently died of alcohol poisoning – and sexual
acts are rampant and very public.)
Furthermore, bringing strippers to something like this not only
was reprehensible and immoral, but also an invitation to whatever
transpired. As a former member of an NCAA Division I track team
(Tennessee, 1971-75), I can attest to the mayhem that can happen
when athletes – or anyone else – and alcohol (and whatever else
is available) come together.
Thus, the Duke Lacrosse players engaged in actions that by themselves
were immoral and illegal. If Duke University had any real standards
of morality and conduct, that alone would have led either to probation
or outright expulsion. Instead, the university administrators and
faculty have decided to engage in depressingly familiar actions
of what passes for campus politics.
If
this situation were not so politically charged, I seriously doubt
whether rape charges would follow. Instead, we see something much
worse, politics and government in action to railroad people into
prison. What happened at the Duke party was ugly, but what has transpired
since then is even uglier.
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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