The Trials of the Edenton Seven, or How Joseph Goebbels Became the
Standard for North Carolina Justice
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
DIGG THIS
While the Duke
non-rape, non-kidnapping, and non-sexual assault case continues
to dominate the "justice" system of the State of North
Carolina, it hardly is the first wrongful prosecution to have happened
there. Given that charges almost certainly will be dropped against
Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans, the results will
not be as tragic as they have been for other people there who not
only have been wrongfully prosecuted, but also wrongfully convicted
and imprisoned.
In this article,
I will deal with one infamous case, the Little Rascals Day Care
prosecutions which dominated the North Carolina courts in the early
1990s, becoming the most expensive criminal case in state history.
This was the case that heightened my own interest in wrongful prosecutions
as it was a complete and utter hoax, yet the State of North Carolina
was able to use its power to destroy innocent lives, throw people
in prison, separate children from parents, and persecute people
whose only crime was being the target of dishonest people.
Because no
one who originally was charged in this case is in prison today,
people might be tempted to say "the system worked," but
that would be untrue. The system "worked," all right,
but it "worked" for prosecutors, judges, state social
workers, and lawyers. It did not work for those individuals
who were wrongfully charged with crimes they never committed – or
that even happened.
The "Big
Lie"
In my title,
I reference Joseph Goebbels, who was the Minister for Public Enlightenment
and Propaganda for the National Socialist regime under Adolph Hitler.
One of the ways that Goebbels would help to whip up hysteria against
the Jews was to engage what he called "The Big Lie." The
theory behind it was this: People would discount the extreme portions
of his propaganda, but they also would conclude that there must
be something to it, or the government would not go to such efforts
to make the statements that it did.
Goebbels actually
developed his techniques from what Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf,
in which Hitler declared that the bigger the lie, the more credibility
it would have. Wikipedia
explains it in the following way:
This technique,
he (Hitler) believed, consisted of telling a lie so "colossal"
that no one would believe anyone "could have the impudence to
distort the truth so infamously". The first documented use of
the phrase "big lie" is in the corresponding passage: "in the
big lie there is always a certain force of credibility."
In pursuing
the Little Rascals case, the State of North Carolina decided to
use the same techniques. As I will point out, the testimony given
by the alleged "child victims" of abuse was so fanciful
and so unbelievable that jurors would discount much of it, but then
conclude that "something happened" or else the state would
not be pursuing the charges. Thus, in the end, North Carolina jurors
sent people to prison for life on the basis of "something happened,"
even if they could not define just what that "something"
was.
The Little
Rascals case began in early 1989, when one
parent’s anger at the owners of the Little Rascals Day Care
Center in Edenton, North Carolina, turned into questioning other
parents about the place. The parent spoke to a police investigator,
and the perfect storm then began.
Some Edenton
police officers and others had recently attended a seminar in which
the subject was ritualistic child abuse by Satanist cults. When
the investigator heard a complaint from the parent that Robert Kelley
and his wife, Betsy Kelly, might be "playing doctor" with
her child, the abuse machinery then kicked in, and nothing could
stop it.
On the surface,
there was nothing that reflected any kind of child abuse at Little
Rascals, and especially ritualistic child abuse and molestation.
First, the day care center, like most others, had people coming
in and out all the time, and no one ever noticed anything out of
the ordinary. Second, the layout of the day care center itself did
not lend itself to secret rooms or places where such abuse could
have taken place without at least some adults having noticed.
Nonetheless,
as often would happen in such cases, the very absence of evidence
was proof that "something" was going on. Moreover,
the Kellys attended a local Baptist church and were active church
members and had never been involved in any satanic cults, or at
least no one ever knew them to be secret Satanists. Yet,
the very fact that no one knew them to be Satanists, or that
no one ever had witnessed any such behavior from them "proved"
in the minds of police investigators that the Kellys and the others
who worked at the day care center were a satanic cult, since everyone
knew that Satanists worked in secret.
If this sounds
to be Orwellian, one is correct. The Edenton police were operating
upon the same wavelength that medieval witch-hunters functioned.
At times, witch-hunters would weight down an accused witch and throw
the hapless person into a pond or river. If the person drowned,
it was proof that he or she was not a witch. However, if the person
escaped, that was proof that the person was a witch. In the
same vein, investigators in the Little Rascals case held that if
no physical evidence could be found, that proved the accused to
be guilty, since they must have been very clever about how they
hid the evidence. Physical evidence was "proof" of abuse,
and, at the same time, the absence of physical evidence also
was proof of abuse.
Soon afterward,
state social workers stepped in with interviews of the children.
The pattern was depressingly familiar, social workers having learned
from previous cases such as the McMartin case in California and
Janet Reno’s various witch hunts when she was state’s attorney for
Dade County, Florida. Children would deny they had been abused,
but then after being badgered by social workers and parents, they
ultimately would "disclose" with fantastic stories.
Operating under
the "children don’t lie" mantra, social workers found
some fantastic things. As Rael
Jean Issac wrote:
Sample allegations
by the children: they were taken aboard a space ship and abused
in outer space; "Mr. Bob" [Kelly] killed babies with a gun; abused
on a ship while trained sharks swam around the boat.
There also
were the usual accounts that seemed to appear at all of these witch
hunts across the country. Included in the litany were a "magic
room" where all sorts of abuse happened, the sticking of swords
into the rectums of children – but leaving absolutely no physical
evidence – cooking babies in microwave ovens, having children eat
human feces and drink urine – with no effects whatsoever.
Children who
continued to say that nothing happened would be badgered with "Billy
already has said that such-and-such happened. You don’t want to
keep on lying, do you?" Children who finally "disclosed"
would be given hugs from their parents and praise from the social
workers, so the four- and-five-year-old children soon learned what
behaviors would be rewarded, and what would be scorned. They acted
accordingly.
Interestingly,
some parents elected to have their children interviewed by private
counselors who determined that nothing had happened. Indeed,
it was the State of North Carolina itself that was going all-out
to promote a hoax, and once the state machinery went into motion,
nothing could stop it. The newspapers across North Carolina and
elsewhere dutifully repeated what police and prosecutors told them.
By the spring of 1989, seven people were charged, including the
Kellys, Dawn Wilson, Shelly Stone, Darlene Harris and Robin Byrum.
The seventh person charged was Scott Privott, the owner of a video
store and personal friend of Bob Kelly.
The Edenton
Seven were not the only alleged child molesters identified by the
children. Others, including people well up in Edenton’s police department
and city government also were pointed out, but authorities decided
that in those cases, the children were "confused."
Sham Trials
Bond was set
so high that none of the seven could post it, so all languished
in prison, and because North Carolina does not require speedy trials,
all spent several years being incarcerated, where they were attacked
and abused by other prisoners because they were "child molesters."
None were wealthy, so they could not afford good counsel, but given
the legal travesties that had transpired and that would be transpiring,
Clarence Darrow himself could not have gained an acquittal.
Bob Kelly went
on trial in July 1991, with the trial lasting until April 1992,
when a jury convicted him of 99 counts of child molestation. Kelly
was given 12 life sentences. As Ofra
Bikel, who did an outstanding series for PBS’s "Frontline,"
pointed out, the trial itself was a sham. The judge was hostile
to Kelly (which was typical in these kinds of trials across the
country) and made sure that the prosecution always held the upper
hand. Jurors and others were enthralled with timid little children
on the witness stand clutching teddy bears and expressing fear of
"Mr. Bob."
The most zealous
of the two state’s prosecutors was Nancy
B. Lamb, who saw herself as the avenger of the children and
who worked herself into near-rages during the trial. The press glowingly
wrote of the Elizabeth City, North Carolina, prosecutor as a woman
with "bobbed hair and flashing eyes," as thought that
gave legitimacy to the nonsense she was spreading.
As for the
jurors, they decided that since the trial had lasted so long, it
was paramount that they come to a unanimous decision. Yet, what
to do about the parts of the testimony that were so fantastic
as to defy belief? Prosecutors had shown
them how in declaring during closing arguments:
You don't
have to wonder whether there was real or pretend snakes. We don't
have to prove whether the snakes, the kids talked about, were
real or pretend. Whether the animals that they talked about or
puppets as some of the children said, whether they were real.
None of that has to be proved to you beyond a reasonable doubt.
And none of that information is elements of the case.
In other words,
believe what you want and discount what you want, since it is all
truthful, except that which is not truthful, but don’t worry about
truth. Most jurors bought the nonsense, along with "children
don’t lie." But prosecutors had not convinced three of the
jurors, but after being badgered by the others, the three gave in.
After the trial, each told "Frontline" that they regretted
their decisions and believe that a travesty of justice had taken
place.
Even before
the trials, prosecutors had told each defendant that if he or she
would testify against one of the others, that person would face
greatly reduced charged, as well as instant freedom, since all of
them were being held in prison because they could not make bond.
None would agree to such terms, each staunchly holding to their
own innocence and a stated belief "in the system." Wilson
told Lamb to "Get your own patsy."
The next year,
Dawn Wilson also was convicted and sentence to life in prison. During
closing arguments, as Wilson held her little girl on her lap, Lamb
told the jury that Wilson really did not love her own child, but
was simply putting on a show for the jurors. Subsequently, the jurors
meekly acquiesced to the demands of the State of North Carolina.
In all the
cases, jurors admitted to falling to the "big lie." During
interviews, they agreed that many, if not most, of the stories told
were too fantastic to be true, but, as one juror told "Frontline,"
"Something must have happened."
Prosecutors
also used different tactics than had been undertaken in the McMartin
investigations. There had been no convictions in the McMartin case
in part because the "disclosure" sessions with children
and social workers had been videotaped. After the first McMartin
trial ended, many jurors said they believed that the children had
been coerced into giving their testimony, which made it unbelievable.
To make sure
that did not happen, only a bare sketch of what occurred during
the sessions between state social workers and the children were
given. There were no videotapes and no transcripts of everything
that was said. It was just Johnny saying something like "Mr.
Bob did this and that" without any embellishment.
Lamb, writing
boastfully in The
Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, said that they made
sure that jurors would not see how the "disclosures"
were made, just that they would only read what social workers wrote
down. In other words, in a case where how the "evidence"
was gathered was as important as the "evidence" itself,
the State of North Carolina made sure that deception would be the
rule.
Betsy Kelly
and Scott Privott, both seeing how Bob Kelly and Wilson had been
railroaded, agreed to plead nolo contendere in 1994. At their
sentencing, each proclaimed innocence but said that they no longer
had confidence in the system to treat them with justice. Despite
the supposed seriousness of their "crimes," each served
only one more year on top of the many years they had spent because
they could not make bond.
Bob Kelly and
Wilson appealed, and in 1995, appellate courts of North Carolina
overturned their convictions, citing numerous errors made by the
judge and prosecution at the trials. Although the state threatened
to charge them again and even briefly brought new charges against
Kelly, ultimately the state dropped all charges in 1997. Betsy Kelly
and Bob divorced, and now she and Privott must register as sexual
offenders wherever they go.
Aftermath
When the State
of North Carolina, through District Attorney Michael B. Nifong,
pressed rape, kidnapping, and sexual assault charged against Reade
Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans, I was not surprised.
Here is a state that openly promoted a hoax, and spent millions
of dollars to promote that hoax and wrongfully imprison people.
None of the
defendants in the Little Rascals case has received as much as an
apology from the state, and while they were financially ruined,
the state never compensated any of them a penny. Being the promoter
of the "Big Lie" means never having to admit to the truth.
Thus, in the
Duke case, the State of North Carolina once again promotes the "Big
Lie" and expects us to believe a number of things. First, it
expects us to believe all of the stories told by Crystal
Gail Mangum, even though they are mutually exclusive. Second, until
the Friday before Christmas, it expected us to believe that it was
possible for men to rape a woman and force oral sex on her, ejaculate
without condoms into her various orifices, and yet leave absolutely
no trace of DNA.
Even now, the
state expects us to believe that Seligmann and Finnerty could be
in two places at one time.
Even now, the
State of North Carolina expects us to believe that three men could
be involved in the kind of brutal sexual assault as Mangum described
to police and to Nifong’s chief investigator, Linwood Wilson, and
yet leave absolutely no physical evidence whatsoever.
Even now, the
State of North Carolina expects us to believe that three strong
young men beat Mangum with their fists and choked her for more than
30 minutes, but left no visible injuries.
Even now, the
State of North Carolina expects us to believe that in the infamous
photo ID session in early April, Mangum was being truthful when
she pointed out three men, went into excruciating detail about what
each of them did to her, and then in December when she told a very
different story, that both accounts are equally true, even though
they are mutually exclusive.
Yes, thanks
to the North Carolina Bar Association bringing charges against Nifong,
he is off the case. However, at this very moment, the State of North
Carolina through different prosecutors still is pursuing kidnapping
and sexual assault charges and looking to bring this farce to trial.
Nifong is in
disgrace and faces charges not only of making unwarranted statements,
but also lying to judges and to the Bar Association investigators
about the hiding of exculpatory DNA evidence. Unfortunately, Nancy
Lamb still practices law in Elizabeth City, still spinning nonsense
to jurors, and still insisting that the Edenton Seven really did
have a "magic room," microwaved babies, and did all sorts
of terrible things in secret.
And,
unfortunately, the State of North Carolina still looks to convict
innocent people and to throw them into prison and tell the rest
of us that justice is being done.
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
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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