Duke: Why the DNA Mattered
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
DIGG THIS
Although it
has been more than two years since rogue prosecutor Michael B. Nifong
secured wrongful indictments in the Duke Non-Rape, Non-Kidnapping,
and Non-Sexual Assault Case, and although it has been more than
a year since North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper declared
Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans "innocent,"
the whispering continues.
Part of the
problem is that Nifong himself and his political allies in Durham,
North Carolina, continue to whisper that "something happened,"
and that the families were able to use money and political clout.
Wendy Murphy, the former prosecutor who often appears on cable television
shows like "Nancy Grace" and others have claimed that
the families bought off accuser Crystal Mangum herself, which is
curious, given that Mangum claimed until the very end she had been
beaten and raped.
Duke faculty
members like Sally
Deutsch, the dean of social sciences at the university, have
openly declared that these young men were rapists who simply got
away with their crimes. They were not innocent, she told one historian,
but rather that the charges "were dropped." And so it
goes. Their reasoning was laid out by Brian Meehan, the DNA scientist
who agreed with Nifong to hide exculpatory evidence until their
plot was uncovered in a dramatic court hearing on December 15, 2006.
Meehan, who
no longer heads DNA Securities, but still is being sued by a number
of former players, declared in court that the fact that no
DNA matches were found between any Duke lacrosse player and
Mangum was irrelevant. After all, he told the court, one can rob
a bank and not leave fingerprints.
Thus, there
always has been a cloud, or at least some people (many of whom have
bad motives, I’m afraid) have tried to say that the players simply
were able to make sure that everything was cleaned up. As Nifong
himself declared on April 11, 2006, at an anti-lacrosse team rally
at North Carolina Central University, the lack of DNA simply meant,
"They left nothing behind." His words were echoed across
the NCCU and Duke campuses, and many people still seem to wonder
if that is true.
(At the 2007
Austrian Scholars Conference, a woman inferred to me that the players
simply had managed to cover up well. The lack of DNA to her meant
absolutely nothing, and even after I had explained to her the particular
science of the ultra-sensitive YSTR tests, she still seemed to doubt
what I was saying.)
Thus, while
this might seem to be a dead issue, I do not think it is. Yes, the
"rape" case is over, and what we see now are the inevitable
lawsuits that have followed, but I believe that I need to explain
to the LRC readers just why I took the stand that I took very early
in this case, and why I have absolutely no doubts as to the correctness
of my position.
In the Duke
case, the DNA was central to everything, not peripheral,
as many would think. (Nifong simply declared the DNA to be irrelevant,
although he did trumpet the supposed "DNA match" between
David Evans and one of the false fingernails Mangum left in the
bathroom. He said that such a "match" was enough for an
indictment, and Nancy Grace on her show declared Nifong’s "discovery"
to be a "home run.")
What did
happen in the DNA testing, and why does it matter? After all, Peter
J. Neufeld, co-founder of The Innocence Project, told the New
York Times that DNA really was not very important, at least
in this case:
Peter J.
Neufeld of the nonprofit Innocence Project, an expert on DNA testing,
said that in general, an absence of DNA evidence did not necessarily
mean there was not a crime. "There have been thousands and thousands
of men who have been convicted in the United States of the crime
of rape without DNA and without semen," Neufeld said.
Indeed, people
still hold onto Neufeld’s unfortunate statement as "proof"
that DNA really does not matter. Yet, it absolutely mattered in
this case because had a rape really occurred, DNA matches almost
certainly would have solved the "crime." When the woman
at the ASC confronted me, I touched her arm very lightly and told
her that under the ultra-sensitive YSTR testing, it would have been
discovered that I left DNA on her. That statement would turn out
to be a key to understanding why the DNA tests truly did exonerate
the lacrosse players.
One forgets
that Nifong first went to the North Carolina crime lab, which quickly
expedited his demands. By the end of March, 2006, the lab told him
clearly that there were no DNA matches at all, something Nifong
held for two weeks before releasing the information. When he did
release it, he declared it to be irrelevant.
However, he
quietly obtained the services of DNA Securities, which did very
sensitive testing, as the state lab told him that there was "something"
on a false fingernail they could not identify found in a trash can
in the bathroom of the house where Mangum claimed to have been raped.
Meehan found a mixture of about 14 people on the nail, which was
not surprising, since it was in a trash can with tissue and other
items that people who had used that bathroom had thrown into the
container. (There is a phenomenon of "DNA transfer" in
which if an item comes into contact with another item that has the
DNA of someone upon it, that DNA can "transfer" to the
second item.)
One profile
found on the fingernail matched David Evans, or at least it "matched"
him and 13 other people. The match was at the 98 percent level,
which while sounding high, is quite weak in DNA testing, where "matches"
might mean that there is a one-in-six-billion chance that the DNA
could belong to someone else, and that person usually lives in a
far-away country. Furthermore, despite what Grace claimed on her
show (that Evans’ "flesh" was found under Mangum’s "fingernail"),
it was an extremely weak match and meant almost nothing scientifically,
especially considering that to assume that it "proved"
Evans raped her would have meant that 13 other young men had to
have crowded into the postage-stamp-sized bathroom at the same time,
a mathematical impossibility.
To shed further
perspective on this "match," Meehan accidentally discovered
that his DNA was found in Mangum’s "rape kit."
Keep in mind that Meehan was wearing the kind of space-age protective
clothing, gloves and everything else that people in his business
wear to keep from contaminating the samples, yet his DNA profile
bled onto the material anyway. Furthermore, the Meehan match
had a stronger profile than did that of David Evans, which sheds
much light on this vaunted "home run" of a DNA match that
Nifong and his supporters claimed.
In other words,
given the strength of Nifong’s case at the time, he could have charged
Meehan with the rape of Crystal Mangum and it would have made almost
as much sense as charging Evans. However, there was even more. As
was clearly pointed out that day in court, Mangum had the DNA of
a number of other men in her private areas and in her underwear,
despite claims from the prosecution that she had not had sex for
a week before the alleged assault. Nifong not only lied about that
evidence in a court, but also withheld that material from the defense,
despite his stating otherwise.
That revelation
was enough to cast doubt on the case, and certainly was enough to
spring the North Carolina State Bar into action to levy a second
set of charges against Nifong and ultimately to disbar him. However,
the True Believers remain.
They ask the
simple question: Could not the players have "cleaned up"
after the rape or used condoms? That was what Nifong claimed, and
a lot of other people have said the same thing. As one NCCU student
told a sympathetic reporter from The Washington Post, "They
(the lacrosse players) watch CSI." The prosecution, in an almost-hilarious
attempt to obfuscate the issue, claimed that the discovery of a
towel in the house with Evans' DNA also was "proof" of the veracity
of Mangum's claims. Mangum told police that Evans had wiped her
with a towel after ejaculating on her, and Nifong claimed to be
in possession of that towel. However, the "magic towel" did not
have even a trace of Mangum's DNA, yet the prosecution was trying
to argue that since there was such a towel (not surprising, since
Evans lived in the house and used towels), it constituted proof
he had raped Mangum. This "magic towel" could wipe off Mangum's
DNA, but leave Evans' intact, according to Nifong.
So, to deal
with that "CSI" claim and Nifong's insistence in the "magic towel,"
I must then demonstrate how someone might successfully eradicate
one’s DNA from a scene.
First, one
can do as Meehan and wear what basically is a space suit. However,
as was clearly shown, even that precaution might fail. Second, one
can use a condom, but condoms leave latex residue, and the lab tested
for that, but found nothing.
Third, one
can use chemicals like bleach or cleaning fluid. For example, in
the gruesome murders in Knoxville, Tennessee, of
Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom, one of the murderers
apparently tried to remove DNA:
One of the
suspects, Vanessa Coleman, later told police that, "she witnessed
Christian's mouth being cleaned with a bottle of some type of
cleaner," in an attempt to remove DNA evidence. Coleman
also said that she had seen "clothes that were stained with blood
and smelled of gas being put in the washing machine at the house."
No one, not
even the nurse Tara Levicy, whose false reports (read the lawsuit
complaints filed by the players against Duke University) kept the
hoax alive almost as much as Nifong’s lies, ever claimed to have
smelled or observed any chemicals such as bleach or cleaning
fluid on Mangum. Moreover, from the pictures taken of the players
at the March 1314, 2006, party where the rape supposedly happened,
we see that the accused players were wearing short-sleeved shirts,
and unless they changed into space suits and then took them off
again and cleverly hid them, there is no way that bare-armed men
could avoid leaving DNA on a woman if they raped and beat her. Furthermore,
Mangum insisted in her statements that the men ejaculated on her,
and there is no way one can do that without leaving DNA. Had those
men followed the "CSI" directions, they would have used
bleach or cleaning fluid on her – and literally everyone who came
into contact with Mangum would have smelled it; no one did.
(Nifong claimed
in his criminal contempt hearing before Judge W. Osmond Smith III
in September, 2007, that he "knew it would be a non-ejaculatory
event." Thus, he reasoned, there would be no DNA. The man really
needs to take a course in forensic science – or he needs to stop
lying.)
There is one
more indirect proof of the power of DNA in this case. When police
raided the alleged "rape house" at 610 N. Buchanan on
March 16, they found the bathroom to be pretty much a mess. Pictures
show that paper and other items from the party still were in the
trash can and elsewhere.
Furthermore,
no one – no one – who inspected the room (and police gave that bathroom
a thorough inspection, taking swabs everywhere and testing for DNA)
found any evidence of bleach products having been recently used.
They found no DNA of Mangum, and none of Finnerty and Seligmann,
and nothing else that demonstrated that either of those two young
men had ever been in that bathroom.
Had there actually
been a rape, and had Evans been one of the rapists, one can bet
that those young men would have thoroughly cleaned the bathroom
and given it the "CSI" treatment. If they were such amateur
"experts," as Nifong and his supporters were claiming,
then it seems those "rapists" would have covered their
tracks.
Neufeld’s words
are true, but they are true for a particular reason. As I wrote
more than a year ago in "An
Open Letter to the Innocence Project":
Unfortunately,
even your co-founder, Peter J. Neufeld, has
made some comments on this case that, while technically true,
are very misleading. Yes, as Neufeld said, "There have
been thousands and thousands of men who have been convicted in
the United States of the crime of rape without DNA and without
semen," but the reason for that has been that most women who claim
they have been raped wait for several days before speaking to
the authorities, and any potential DNA sources by then are scientifically
useless.
In the case
of the Duke accuser, police were able to treat her body as a crime
scene, and they were able to obtain numerous DNA matches
– of other men.
In the dishonest
pursuit of rape charges against innocent people, Nifong, the Durham
Police Department, and their supporters, discounted literally all
science in this investigation. It was the classic "Heads, I
win, Tails, you lose" proposition, in which any DNA evidence
that would have demonstrated their case was acceptable, but any
DNA evidence that would be exculpatory was illegitimate and useless.
These people
will continue to mouth the same lies, as their pursuit of these
young men had to do more with a political agenda than any pursuit
of truth. However, I do hope that for those who have had doubts
about the outcome of this case, that this article will help change
their minds.
Police and
prosecutors had every reason to investigate this case and gather
as much evidence as they could. The DNA testing itself was some
of the most complete of any case anywhere. There literally was no
stone left unturned, yet investigators found nothing, nothing. Thus,
they turned to lies and lawbreaking in an attempt to keep this case
alive, and they found many willing allies who long ago had come
to believe that all "truth" is political in nature.
The criminal
portion of the Duke case is over. There should have been criminal
investigations of many of those on the prosecution and police side,
but none have been undertaken for obvious political reasons. What
are left are the lawsuits, and I would urge readers to work through
the many claims laid out
in the court documents. They are powerful, and they tell a story.
However,
the DNA also told a story, and it demonstrated that the only criminals
in this case were employed in official government positions of trust
and power. There is none other.
April
21, 2008
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. He also is a consultant
with American Economic Services.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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