Duke: The Anatomy of a Hoax
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
DIGG THIS
As the criminal
case against Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans continues
to fall around Durham County District Attorney Michael Nifong, and
as Nifong’s own future becomes even more uncertain, it is time to
take a cold, hard look at how this hoax ever got legs and has advanced
as far as it has. Make no mistake about it; this is a hoax, yet
as I write, the three young men still face felony charges
that could put them in prison for most of their lives.
No one, except
perhaps the North Carolina Chapter of the NAACP and its supporters,
along with Wendy Murphy, still claims that the young men raped,
much less kidnapped and assaulted Crystal Gail Mangum on March 14,
2006. The physical evidence that would indicate that anything
occurred simply is non-existent. Prosecutors across the State of
North Carolina know it; that is why they have told him to step aside.
Nifong’s fellow attorneys in the state bar association have filed
charges against him (and are considering others) that could result
in disbarment – or even a recommendation he be criminally prosecuted.
The question
one asks this morning, then, is simple: Why is the criminal case
still alive? This question receives a simple answer: It is alive
because the government of North Carolina assumes that all criminal
indictments are valid. For example, those who demand that this case
go to trial cite the fact that Nifong obtained indictments against
the three men last spring, and the very fact that he was able to
convince a grand jury to indict them "proves" this is
a legitimate case.
Such a set
of circumstances, of course, proves nothing. Grand juries long ago
ceased to be anything but a toy of prosecutors. It is rare when
grand juries rebuff their masters, and on the day last April when
Finnerty and Seligmann were indicted, the grand jury of Durham County
also handed down 87 other indictments. In other words, grand jurors
that day were little more than drones at a factory cranking out
what the boss had ordered them to make.
(Lest anyone
believe that grand juries actually "consider" evidence,
remember that in North Carolina, grand jury proceedings go on without
recordings, notes, or transcripts. Only the prosecutor and police
appear, and whatever they say is assumed to be the unvarnished truth.)
One asks, however,
what information did Nifong actually have the day he walked into
the grand jury room and call for two of the young men (and later
the third) to be formally charged with crimes. The scandal is that
Nifong knew nothing more that day than what we know now, and what
we know now tells us that Nifong has perpetrated a hoax, a lie,
a set of lies. Furthermore, on the day he demanded indictments,
Nifong already had to know that his beloved Duke Lacrosse
Case was dead in the water, kept alive by an adoring press, a set
of contradictory police reports, outright lies, and a judge who
had every incentive to help his former colleague win a contested
primary election. Think of it as a tag team of villains, except
on this day, the villains were the winners.
Since Nifong
obtained indictments of Seligmann, Finnerty, and Evans, a number
of blogs have appeared to attack the "evidence," the process
itself, and Nifong. A recent posting on the blog called Liestoppers
is one
of the most chilling documents I have read on this case, and
I will look at this piece in some detail. (I recommend that readers
look at all of it.) In the first paragraph, it states:
…we have
detailed the various misleading statements and unethical actions
that Durham County District Attorney Nifong has used throughout
the case to spitefully prosecute three innocent young men. We
now have another Hoax to add to the list, perhaps the most serious
to date the purposeful non-disclosure and misrepresentation
of DNA test results and their evidentiary implications. The DNA
chronology, when examined with dates and events in sequence, unambiguously
demonstrates Mr. Nifong's, and others', intentional misconduct
and abuse of power.
These words
are powerful, as they speak of intentional misconduct and abuse
of power. No one is saying that Nifong simply has been zealous
or even believes that the young men raped or even touched Mangum.
Nifong pursues this criminal case because he can do it. There
is no other reason, and so far the State of North Carolina is satisfied
with that explanation. What has led Liestoppers and people like
me to conclude that this is and has been an intentional hoax? I
will present the evidence.
The DNA
Order
Judge Ronald
Stephens on March 23, 2006, ordered that all white members of the
Duke University lacrosse team be forced to give DNA samples to police.
Stephens was a former Durham County district attorney and at one
time had been Nifong’s boss. In requesting this overly-broad order,
Nifong’s office declared:
Medical records
and interviews that were obtained by a subpoena revealed the victim
had signs, symptoms, and injuries consistent with being raped
and sexually assaulted vaginally and anally. Furthermore, the
SANE nurse stated the injuries and her behavior were consistent
with a traumatic experience.
We know now
that the report from the medical examination given Mangum on the
morning of March 14 said no such things, something that attorneys
have filed in one of their various motions. First, no examiner drew
a conclusion that she had been raped, and second, the injuries that
the DA’s office claimed that Mangum had suffered were non-existent.
To put it bluntly, the request was a fraud.
Nifong, however,
was not content to lie just about the medical examination. The DNA
tests, he declared would point to the guilty and exonerate those
who had not participated in this alleged gang rape. The request
stated:
The DNA evidence
requested will immediately rule out any innocent persons, and
show conclusive evidence as to who the suspect(s) are in the alleged
violent attack upon this victim.
We know now
that Nifong was lying. After literally every set of tests came up
snake eyes, he then declared at a political rally to a mostly-black
audience at North Carolina Central University in mid-April that
since there was no lacrosse player DNA present, he would pursue
a rape conviction "the old fashioned way" before DNA could
be isolated and used as evidence. In other words, Nifong simply
dismissed the exculpatory evidence, not because it was irrelevant
in this case – indeed, the DNA evidence would and will tell a huge
story here – but because its presence would hinder his politically-popular
prosecution.
Furthermore,
we know that even before his swaggering mid-April speech at NCCU
("My presence here means this case is not going away"),
Nifong and Stephens had to know that the case was in serious trouble.
The state lab already had found no DNA, and so Nifong turned to
a private lab, DNA Security, headed by Dr. Brian Meehan. The private
lab, as we were to find later – much later – not only found no evidence
of anyone touching Mangum, much less raping her, but also found
the DNA of seven other men in and on Mangum’s body. More on that
part later, for it has turned out to be the most important development
in this case, and one that likely will ruin Meehan professionally
and perhaps land Nifong in prison.
Stephens, an
experienced prosecutor, had to know when he permitted the transfer
of DNA materials to DNA Security that this was a dead-in-the-water
investigation. He had blocked defense attempts to force Nifong to
turn over investigation materials – as required by state law. But
Stephens decided to help jump-start this clinically-dead case by
releasing a nasty, but irrelevant email from Ryan McFayden, a Duke
lacrosse player. (Police had confiscated computers, downloaded emails,
and had flyspecked other items owned by white team members.)
McFayden had
fired off an email to his teammates soon after the accusations story
broke, paraphrasing something from American Psycho, a contemporary
novel they were reading in one of their classes about a New York
stockbroker who murders people at night. (I do not include what
he said here, except that I would not want one of my own sons writing
anything like that.)
Nifong and
Stephens already knew that McFayden was not a suspect, given that
Mangum already had named her "attackers" during a photo
lineup that violated federal, state, and Durham City procedures.
Mangum had not identified McFayden as an attacker or someone who
had helped the "rapists," so while his email was inappropriate at
best and downright nasty at worst, it had no bearing on the case,
or what Nifong claimed was the case.
Note that Stephens
did not release any other emails, including those that might have
shed light on exculpatory evidence. Instead, he threw it
out there for the public to read, and the reaction was predictable.
Duke President Richard Brodhead immediately suspended McFayden (who
later was re-instated), fired Duke’s men’s lacrosse coach, and cancelled
the team’s season, a blow considering that Duke at the time was
ranked number two in the nation. The McFayden email, which Nifong
and Stephens knew was irrelevant, nonetheless became the defining
moment in this whole episode, and it was held out as "proof"
that the team was a den of rapists.
Nifong Plows
On and Hides Evidence
Energized by
the angry Duke response to the McFayden email, Nifong easily plowed
on, unencumbered by the facts. He obtained indictments against Finnerty
and Seligmann first, their pictures then being plastered on the
cover of Newsweek as accused rapists. Evans would be indicted
soon afterward.
But Nifong’s
troubles with the evidence were just beginning. While Meehan’s lab
was able to find a trace of Evans’ DNA on a fake fingernail Mangum
wore (it was found in the trash can of the bathroom in the house
where Evans lived), Nifong knew that as evidence, this ballyhooed
DNA "match" really meant nothing, since Evans’ DNA most
likely was all over items in his trash cans.
However, the
story was becoming worse for Nifong, even if no one else knew it
but he and Meehan. Mangum told investigators that she had not had
sex with anyone for a week before the alleged incident, yet Meehan’s
lab found sexual evidence from seven men, none of them lacrosse
players.
This was explosive,
for it demonstrated two things. First, it showed Mangum already
had lied to police investigators, thus undermining her credibility.
Second, it bolstered the account told by the accused, which was
that none of them even had touched her. Something like this in the
hands of the defense would have provided powerful exculpatory evidence,
so Nifong and Meehan conspired, according to Meehan’s sworn testimony
at a December 15, 2006, hearing, to withhold that evidence
from the defense.
Although the
defense attorneys were skeptical, Stephens continued to permit Nifong’s
stonewalling. When the case later was passed to Judge Kenneth Titus
that summer, the new judge threw down a gag order (which really
only gagged the defense, as Nifong had stopped talking to the press
after his early outbursts), and still enabled Nifong’s conspiracy
to hide the evidence. While both Stephens and Titus would no doubt
claim that they were unaware of what Nifong was hiding, it was their
coddling of the prosecutor that kept this important exculpatory
evidence in hiding until the third judge on the case, W. Osmond
Smith III finally ordered Nifong to turn over all materials,
which he finally did in the fall of 2006.
Nifong already
was on the record telling all three judges in separate hearings
that he did not have anything to add to the earlier incomplete reports
that Meehan’s lab had sent to the defense. To put it another way,
Nifong lied to the judges, telling them clearly that he was
not aware of any other information while knowing that he had something
in his possession that he did not want to share with the defense.
At that moment,
Nifong stepped over the line from civil liability (for extracurricular
statements he made at press conferences and interviews that were
not part of his official duties) to criminal liability. Lying
to judges and withholding information can be construed as criminal
offenses, and one awaits the decisions of the authorities.
For
the time being, however, the case plows on to a scheduled hearing
on February 5 as though Nifong were telling the truth and Mangum
really were assaulted. One can only hope that Smith will not enable
this rogue prosecutor in the way that Stephens and Titus did – to
their everlasting shame. If Smith permits this hoax to go to trial,
then he will have endorsed outright prosecutorial lies and misconduct.
One hopes that this jurist will see things differently.
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.
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