The Duke Non-Crime Hoax at One Year: What Have We Learned?
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
DIGG THIS
At some time
in the early morning of Wednesday, March 14, the Duke Non-Rape,
Non-Kidnapping, Non-Sexual Assault Case will be a year old. Given
the facts of the case, we should be speaking of it in the past tense,
but thanks to the institutional dishonesty that is imbedded in the
"justice system" of the State of North Carolina, three
young men remain charged with crimes that never occurred – and that
the authorities know did not occur.
The events
of the past year have been extraordinary, to say the least. Since
Durham County District Attorney Michael B. Nifong gained indictments
of Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans, we have seen
the case take turns that no one would have predicted last May when
Nifong seemed to be invulnerable and had the apparatus of state
power firmly behind him. While Nifong’s pending charges before the
North Carolina State Bar are serious – and could likely result in
his disbarment – the image of the poor, embattled prosecutor certainly
was not what we saw in the spring of 2006 when he appeared in front
of television cameras to promote the hoax.
While it is
obvious that the state now has a difficult task ahead of it should
prosecutors wish to take this nonsense to trial, perhaps we should
look back 10 months ago when Nifong was reveling in his election
victory and three young men were indicted for rape and other crimes.
It is doubtful that one could have predicted where we would be right
now.
In ordinary
circumstances, this case would have been over almost before it started.
Crystal Gail Mangum was picked up by police early on March 14 because
she refused to leave a parked car. Because she was drunk and apparently
had taken some other medication, authorities decided to place her
in a detox unit until she could be sober again. It was at that point
that she claimed she was the victim of a gang rape while doing a
strip act at a party hosted by players from Duke University’s lacrosse
team.
People who
recount listening to the police radio that night (or who talked
to police officers) say that the officers really did not believe
Mangum. She was well-known to police as a local sex worker, and
her medical examination did not show signs of the beating and gang
rape she claimed happened. Still, medical examiners did the obligatory
rape check and did DNA swabs. She claimed that other than the rape,
she had not engaged in sexual activity for more than a week.
A couple days
later, police burst into the house at 610 Buchanan Avenue where
the three lacrosse captains lived, and where the party had been
held. Police reported that the captains were cooperative in the
investigation, showing them the bathroom where the alleged rape
occurred, and then coming to police headquarters to answer questions
and to take DNA swabs. They did all of this without advice of counsel,
and the captains said that police told them the investigation would
not amount to much. In other words, at that time, police still did
not believe Mangum.
(I hold that
they never did believe Mangum, but elected to try to frame people
when Nifong stepped into the case and took it over. Even a cursory
glance at the "investigation" demonstrates that police
never took the charges seriously, and tended to make up things on
the fly as the frame-up started to build.)
As I have pointed
out in other articles, Nifong seized on this case in order to publicize
his own candidacy in the upcoming Democratic primary for district
attorney. (The governor had appointed him to the position the previous
year.) Within a few weeks, he had given more than 70 interviews
to television reporters and newspapers, and it soon became one of
the top stories for the nightly news.
In two separate
meetings with police, Mangum had failed to point out any of her
"attackers," although she did manage to say with "100
percent certainty" that Brad Ross was at the party – even though
he had unimpeachable evidence that he was elsewhere. In the third
meeting in early April, Mangum picked out Seligmann and Finnerty
with "100 percent certainty," although in earlier sessions,
she had failed even to recognize them. (Neither person fit the original
description she gave to the police, but since this was not a serious
investigation, police and Nifong were all-too-happy to have faces
and names in order to secure indictments.) She picked Evans with
a "90 percent certainty," except that she said her attacker
had a moustache, something that Evans did not have.
What is notable
is that after she had picked out these supposedly dangerous rapists,
Nifong did not immediately arrest these alleged miscreants. As I
shall point out, there was a reason – a nefarious one at that –
why Nifong chose not to make immediate arrests.
Meanwhile,
Nifong secured a court order that required all 46 white lacrosse
players to give police DNA samples, which they did without argument,
despite the fact that the order was given by Judge Ronald Stephens,
a former Durham DA and Nifong’s former boss, and certainly a Nifong
ally. In seeking the DNA order, Nifong told the court that the DNA
would "identify" those who were guilty and "exonerate"
those who did not take part in the alleged rape.
Unfortunately
for Nifong, the state crime lab soon came back with DNA results
that matched no lacrosse player. Undaunted, Nifong then requested
the samples be examined at a private lab run by Dr. Brian Meehan
that did the hyper-sensitive YSTD tests. That decision ultimately
would turn Nifong’s case against him and perhaps destroy his career.
Again, the
tests found no matches with lacrosse players, except for a quasi-match
on a false fingernail that allegedly belonged to Mangum that was
found in the bathroom trash can in the house. (The tests said that
they could "not exclude" Evans, but also could not exclude
14 other players, none of them Finnerty or Seligmann. For criminal
investigation purposes, this was useless, but it literally was all
that Nifong had to justify his indictment of Evans.)
Nifong and
two other Durham police officers met with Meehan at his Burlington,
North Carolina, office on April 10, and Meehan had bad news. Not
only were there no DNA matches that would demonstrate any
sexual or physical contact between any lacrosse player and
Crystal, but despite her claims she had not engaged in sexual activity
for a week, there was evidence of her having recent sex with at
least seven men, none of them lacrosse players.
This clearly
presented problems for Nifong. He had stirred up the community –
and especially the blacks in Durham – for two weeks, giving interview
after interview, giving a demonstration on television of how the
young men "choked" Mangum before "raping" her,
and how their actions definitely were racially motivated. Local
protesters put together a film of their demonstration, and they
repeated Nifong’s claims of a 30-minute episode of beating,
raping, and sodomizing.
It was clear
that the kind of assault Nifong claimed the young men committed
would have left a trail of DNA, and it also was clear that the YSTD
testing would surely have detected the aftermath of such an attack.
After all, Mangum claimed the assailants were naked, did not wear
condoms, and had ejaculated, and also forced her to perform oral
sex. (She claimed to have spit the semen onto the floor, but a careful
DNA check by police did not turn up any trace of semen from the
accused or Mangum’s saliva.)
An honest man
would have given it up right there, as Nifong, Meehan, and the police
officers present surely recognized that Mangum’s account, given
just six days before, could not be true. They had her claims
and her identifications, but the science simply did not match any
of her stories. Instead, those present agreed to withhold much of
the evidence, and not tell the defense about the seven other men.
In that moment, those who were sworn to protect and uphold the law
committed a felony.
(In a letter
to the North Carolina State Bar, Nifong claimed that he did not
attend any April 10 meeting, something that conflicts with Meehan’s
sworn court testimony of December 15, 2006, and the notes of two
Durham police officers. Ironically, this claim was made in a letter
responding to a bar claim that Nifong had lied to them in an earlier
response after the bar had publicly accused him of lying
and withholding evidence. Thus, it seems clear that Nifong lied
in response to an earlier claim that he lied, which was a response
to an earlier claim that he lied. I am not making this up.)
The next day,
Nifong spoke at a community rally at North Carolina Central University,
where Mangum was a student (she took on-line classes and did not
go to the campus). In response to questions as to why he had made
no arrests, he claimed that the investigation was ongoing, despite
the fact he already knew who he would arrest, something he failed
to tell the audience. Having received bad news the previous day
regarding DNA testing, Nifong then
told the crowd that in this case, DNA really did not matter
at all, and that he would convict the "rapists" through
"the old-fashioned way," by the single testimony of a
woman who already had spun nearly a dozen mutually-exclusive accounts
of the alleged incident.
Nifong did
not arrest anyone until April 17, right after securing grand jury
indictments, nearly two weeks after Mangum made her "identifications"
to Durham police (in a photo line-up that violated state and city
protocol on how to conduct such activities). The obvious question
is this: Why did he wait so long, given that he had been claiming
there were dangerous "rapists" on the loose?
Had Nifong
made an arrest before the young men were indicted, they could
have requested a preliminary hearing in which Nifong would have
been forced to present the evidence – or, should we say non-evidence
– before a judge in a court of law. Defense attorneys could have
cross-examined Mangum and the police, and it is clear that this
could have been a disaster for the prosecution. Thus, Nifong held
his cards so he could gain indictments, mollify the black community,
as well as the white leftists who populate Durham, and win the primary
– which he did.
After he indicted
David Evans in early May, Nifong then refused to speak to the press
and he and the NAACP then demanded that the defense be gagged, something
granted by another Nifong ally, Judge Kenneth Titus. Thus, by early
summer, here was the situation:
- Three young
men were indicted for rape, kidnapping, and sexual assault even
though there literally was no physical evidence tying them to
what Nifong had described as a "brutal rape;"
- All of the
mainstream press, from the local newspapers (which threw gasoline
onto the fire early by repeating Nifong’s claims that the lacrosse
players had put up a "blue wall of silence") to the
Washington Post, New York Times, Time, and Newsweek,
along with all of the major news networks were clearly in Nifong’s
pocket;
- A small
number of writers and bloggers, including Michael Gaynor, K.C.
Johnson, Wendy McElroy, Thomas Sowell, La Shawn Barber, the "Johnsville
News," and I were the only ones presenting another side to
the story;
- The defense
was making claims to the judges that Nifong was illegally withholding
evidence, but the judges sided with Nifong – at least until Judge
W. Osmond Smith III was assigned to the case in late summer. Even
then, Nifong claimed he was not withholding anything;
- As a nurse
who has many years of experience in examining rape victims and
analyzing rape cases told me, the Durham community was so worked
up that any jury from Durham County almost surely would not be
interested in looking seriously at exculpatory evidence, and I
am sure that was what Nifong hoped would happen.
Had it not
been for the bloggers and the extraordinary efforts of the defense
– which has come at a price tag of many millions of dollars for
the three families – the danger that these young men would be facing
would be much greater than it is now. Nifong no longer is on the
case, and the special prosecutors are faced with their only prosecution
witness being a prostitute who has changed her story on many occasions
– the latest being on December 21 – which led Nifong to drop the
rape charges. Thus, most experts and observers (and North Carolina
attorneys who have contacted me) believe that the special prosecutors
have no alternative but to cut and run, as bringing the case to
trial very well would make them liable to charges of suborning perjury.
What have
we learned?
This article
has dealt solely with the legal aspects of the case, along with
the illegal and dishonest behavior by Nifong and his police allies.
There is much more to say about just the legal portion (including
out-and-out intimidation of witnesses and attempts to force witnesses
to commit perjury), but space does not permit it here.
Furthermore,
I have not written this time on the response of many on the Duke
faculty, although I have written many articles on this sub-topic,
and K.C. Johnson has hammered the faculty through his authoritative
blog. Unfortunately, many people have come to believe that the
antics of the so-called "Group of 88," the faculty members
who signed the infamous "listening" advertisement in the
Duke Chronicle on April 6, are the story.
For example,
both the Weekly
Standard and American
Conservative recently took the Duke faculty to task, and
I recommend both articles. Likewise, the coverage of the National
Review has been dominated by the response of Duke University
leftists. While I agree with the perspectives taken by the writers
of these pieces, I also realize that this is a safe "way out"
for many conservatives. By bashing leftists, they fail to go to
the heart of this case, and that is that it was made possible because
of massive lies and misconduct on behalf of the prosecution and
the police.
In America’s
so-called culture wars, leftists like to bash Bible-thumping right-wingers,
and the right bashes the atheistic culture of the left. Once upon
a time, the left at least gave lip service to things like due process
and police misconduct, at least until they found that the Clinton
Administration found ways to deny due process to people that the
left did not like.
Conservatives,
on the other hand, have believed themselves allied with police and
prosecutors and when conservatives have been in power, police and
prosecutors have been granted much wider authority than surely the
Constitution and the American tradition have permitted. Thus, at
best, conservatives simply are declaring that Nifong is a "bad
apple," but that most prosecutors are honest, hard-working,
decent people who simply want to get the criminals off the street.
Furthermore,
they see prosecutors as having few powers and as people who must
do battle against unscrupulous defense attorneys who hold all of
the cards. It is conservatives who constantly are insisting that
the application of due process guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution
will turn that document into a "suicide
pact" if prosecutors are not given carte blanche.
Thus, the "bad
apple" theory of Michael B. Nifong works well with many conservatives.
That way, they can bash the Duke University leftists and still defend
police and prosecutors – and look (at least in their own eyes) like
"civil libertarians" as well. Unfortunately, Michael Nifong
is not a "bad apple" who happens to be spoiling a barrel
of "good apples"; most of the barrel is rotten, and has
been rotten for a long time. This especially is true in the federal
system – and that last line comes from one of the few honest prosecutors
that I know who has discussed this case at length with me.
Granted, there
are quirks in North Carolina law that give extraordinary powers
to prosecutors, and states such as Maryland and even California
have more safeguards built into the system. However, as I have documented
over the past several years, it ultimately does not matter what
legal safeguards are in place if a prosecutor is hell-bent on engaging
in a malicious prosecution.
Yes, I believe
the lacrosse case once again has exposed the dangerous nonsense
that is expounded by campus leftists, and it also has exposed the
dishonest agendas of left-wing feminists across the country. Yet,
for all the badness of these groups, their actions really did not
have the effect upon three families of young men innocent of the
crimes for which they were charged that Nifong’s unholy crusade
had upon them.
That is because
Nifong represents the most coercive and violent part of the state:
the "justice" system that has the legal power to incarcerate
and kill. When one views the extraordinary effort that it has taken
– and the vast amount of resources that have been consumed in the
process – just to shake a case that always has been transparently
false, one is able to gain a small appreciation (if that is the
right word) for the violent power of the state.
What
have we learned? We have learned – once again, and to our sorrow
– that the individuals who represent the state often have the proclivity
to do what is wrong – and they have the powers to carry out their
evil deeds. It seems that the only antidote has been the use of
vast quantities of what Louis Brandeis called the "best disinfectant":
sunlight. After a year, the sunlight is shining and perhaps – perhaps
– the authorities of the State of North Carolina who have been so
badly exposed will end this illegal, unwarranted, dishonest, and
malicious prosecution.
March
12, 2007
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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