Duke’s Upcoming Liability, or Richard Brodhead Needs to Find a Good Lawyer
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
DIGG THIS
Even though
the criminal case against the three Duke lacrosse players has not
yet been deep-sixed, the lawsuits against Duke University have begun.
The family of Kyle Dowd, a lacrosse player who was graduated last
spring, filed
against the university and a faculty member, Kim Curtis, claiming
that Curtis
failed Dowd in retaliation for his being on the lacrosse team.
Curtis, who
is a visiting professor in Duke’s political science department,
has
a reputation for being a leftist ideologue, and was one of the
88 signers of the infamous
"social disaster" advertisement in the Duke Chronicle
that thanked the protesters who acted in the aftermath of the charges
levied against the lacrosse players. Furthermore, Curtis actively
participated in a number of rallies in which protesters held up
signs calling for the lacrosse players to be "castrated,"
while other signs declared: "Get a conscience, not a lawyer,"
and others just declared: "Confess!" Her postings on a
community web site (not available here, but I have read them) left
no doubt that she believed her students either committed rape or
at the very least were covering for the alleged rapists.
To gain a picture
of what the Duke University lacrosse players experienced last spring
as they walked through a literal gauntlet on their way to class,
envision the following things:
- Students
holding signs declaring: "Castrate";
- Speakers
at regular rallies calling for their expulsion;
- Students
screaming slogans at them;
- The New
Black Panthers came to Durham and said they were going to the
Duke University dorms where lacrosse players lived in order to
get "confessions" from them;
- A poster
with the pictures of the white lacrosse players calling for them
to "please
come forward" and tell police who allegedly raped the
accuser, Crystal Gail Mangum, was distributed and posted all over
Duke’s campus, along with a "fact
sheet" that we know today had no "facts"
that were correct.
For the time
being, people are trying to make this a "free speech"
issue, but the situation is much deeper than that. Each year, college
campuses all over the country host rallies such as "take back
the night" marches against rape, and "stop the hate,"
and the like. Many of the topics covered in these rallies are controversial
and clearly people are not in agreement, but for the most part they
are general in nature.
What happens,
however, when ideologies meet specific accusations? To use the words
of the 88 Duke signees, one has a "social disaster." (A
group called "Liestoppers," put its
own advertisement in the Raleigh News & Observer
last summer to point out that the real "social disaster"
is the attempt to railroad innocent people into prison.) That is
where the real liability for Duke University begins.
For all of
the talk about free speech, Duke University also has a contractual
obligation to its students, and that includes keeping them from
being physically and verbally harassed by faculty and students.
Assume that the objects of this wrath are homosexuals, and they
are met with signs that mock them and have anti-gay slurs, or call
for their sexual organs to be cut off. Furthermore, assume that
the protest is not against homosexuality in general, but
rather aimed specifically at certain males on campus who are gay.
The liability
that Duke would face in the previously-mentioned example is the
same liability the university undoubtedly faces now. Claims of grade
retaliation, while having to be proven in the proper legal setting,
are serious charges. Moreover, many lacrosse players quit attending
classes altogether in April because some faculty members allegedly
were calling them rapists in class or strongly hinted that
the players were guilty of rape. The situation became so serious
that the Duke administration literally had to send an email to faculty
members reminding them that they were not free to do such
things.
When one adds
the intimidating atmosphere on campus, it is clear that Duke did
not actively protect students who by law were under the presumption
of innocence. As we have seen Michael Nifong’s case fall apart
even more, we come to understand just how important the innocence
presumption really is. After being accused not only of rape, but
also of covering up a rape and then hiding behind a "wall of silence,"
we understand now that the players did come forward and tell
the truth, but the "truth" they told was not what the police, prosecutors,
and apparently the powers that be at Duke University wanted to hear.
In the legal
sense, it was Duke University itself that told the lacrosse players
that they were rapists and killers. (One Duke professor wrote that
the lacrosse players were like the people in Mississippi who murdered
Emmett Till
in 1955.) No, the president of Duke University, Richard Brodhead,
did not say it, nor did anyone else in the administration directly
declare the lacrosse players to be guilty.
However, under
the standards of vicarious liability, the fact that the lacrosse
players had to run a gauntlet each day, and they had to listen to
themselves being called "rapists" in class and on campus, and the
university did almost nothing to protect them, as though Brodhead
did it himself. Perhaps that is unfair, but that is how the law
works. In light of just how pathetic and dishonest a case that Nifong
has been putting forth, Duke’s culpability seems even greater than
one might imagine.
One hopes that
this case will end soon, and charges will be dropped against three
young men who never should have been facing them in the first place.
Literally, every safeguard that the law supposedly has against wrongful
prosecution was obliterated, and only because the players could
afford expert legal help, and because an army of bloggers and writers
were able to take Nifong’s case apart and not suffer legal sanctions
for it have we been able to move to where we are today.
This also should
serve as a warning to university administrators as to the importance
of things like due process and legal presumption of innocence, not
to mention the adoption of Political Correctness as the guiding
light of university policy. Even if Duke University were to allow
the Dowd and other upcoming lawsuits (and they surely will be coming,
trust me) to go to trial, and even if the university were to appear
before friendly Durham juries and win, the information that would
come out no doubt would constitute a public relations nightmare.
The world would be able to see firsthand just how badly Duke University
treated students who told the truth, and how the university legally
encouraged its campus to be a forum of lies.
Below are
photographs of demonstrations that the lacrosse players faced each
day they were on campus. The Duke administration did nothing to
curb these excesses.





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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