Another Open Letter to Roy Cooper
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
DIGG THIS
It has been
18 months since I last wrote an open letter to you, and at that
time I was hoping that the State of North Carolina, having done
the wrong thing for more than a year, would try to make things right.
I really did want to believe it, seeing your strong and unequivocal
performance the day in April
2007 when you dismissed the charges, declaring that Reade Seligmann,
Collin Finnerty, and David Evans were "innocent."
Yet, here I
am writing another letter because you permitted a number of people
who openly broke the law to walk away without a scratch, even while
three young men and their families were forced to pay millions of
dollars to defend themselves against charges that were transparently
false. Furthermore, you permitted two sociopaths, Michael B. Nifong
and Crystal Gail Mangum, the accuser, to walk away unharmed.
Well, Mr. Cooper,
today Mangum "thanked" you for all your hard work. She
held
a press conference to publicize her new book, Last Dance
for Grace, which is a collection of lies that you instantly
will recognize. The usual media suspects were there, as well as
people from the North Carolina NAACP, which had so desperately tried
to keep the Big Lie alive even after you announced the charges were
false.
Guess what,
Mr. Cooper? Crystal claims that she
was sexually assaulted and, no, she did not change her
story one bit. Furthermore, she did not look like someone who was
having yet another psychotic episode, as you and the media wanted
to portray her when you declared you would not seek charges against
her. After all, who could not feel sympathy for someone who is psychotic
and not in control of herself?
Certainly,
the families of the indicted players did not want to sue Crystal
or have her prosecuted for the misdemeanor of filing a false report.
After all, who wanted to be seen as going after a psychotic woman
who claimed she was levitating (one of her stories) while being
raped? When nearly 40 other lacrosse families filed suit against
Nifong, Durham, and Duke University this past year, Crystal’s name
was missing from those suits as well.
As far as I
am concerned, you made a huge mistake in not charging Crystal. She
is no poor, psychotic woman; she is a sociopath, just like Nifong.
Neither she nor the former disgraced prosecutor have attempted to
tell the truth, but have spun even more lies, which is pretty much
in line with how sociopaths generally act. In fact, Nifong has supporters
who have decided that not only was the case legitimate, but your
criticisms of him were politically motivated, as you decided to
help guilty, white, rich boys get away with rape. If you don’t believe
me, just read the Nifong
website. (I think you especially will like the cartoons which
depict you as a tool of the rich and guilty, not to mention the
"Nifong
Manifesto.")
During the
press conference, someone asked you if you were going to investigate
further into the case, and you
said that you might. About six months later, however, you decided
to punt the case to the U.S. Department of (In)Justice, which decided
it would punt, too. When you asked the DO(In)J to investigate, you
declared that North Carolina did not have a grand jury mechanism
by which to dig into the case.
Now, that is
really interesting to me. You had no problem bringing in two special
prosecutors, Mary Winstead and James Coman, to investigate the rape,
sexual assault, and kidnapping charges in the lacrosse case. Are
you telling me that the office of attorney general for the State
of North Carolina lacks the legal ability to investigate crimes?
Something simply does not ring true.
Furthermore,
there were plenty of people and plenty of crimes to investigate.
Let us start with Crystal. Forget about the misdemeanor charge of
filing a false report; here was someone who took thousands of dollars
from the state "victim’s fund" and supported her lifestyle.
One cannot take thousands of dollars fraudulently (unless one is
an elected politician or a good friend of the elected politician).
What about
"lying to investigators"? When she had her interview with
Winstead and Coman, she made up a cock-and-bull story about being
"levitated" while Reade, Collin, and David were busy raping
her (and then she was assaulted by 20 lacrosse players after that).
Now, you and the others dismissed it to her being psychotic, but
a friend of mine who also is a certified Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner
(SANE) tells me that she believes Crystal saw the handwriting on
the wall and decided to come up with a whopper. (As my friend told
me, "She might be crazy, but crazy like a fox.")
Speaking of
SANEs, there is the problem of Tara Levicy, the SANE (or, SANE-in-training)
who was not legally qualified to do the rape exam of Crystal Mangum,
yet signed the examination form as the one who did the exam, even
though it was performed by Dr. Julie Manly. Moreover, Robert
Ekstrand, the attorney representing three of the families that are
suing Duke, Durham, and Nifong, has written in the formal complain
that Levicy "fabricated" material on the medical charts.
If what he
says is true, then he is alleging that Tara Levicy committed a felony
under North Carolina state law. Furthermore, she had some partners-in-crime,
namely Nifong and members of the Durham Police Department. It is
a felony to lie to a grand jury, but that is what Ben Himan and
Mark Gottlieb did when they secured indictments against the three
young men. Himan even admitted as much during his testimony to the
North Carolina State Bar in 2007.
Then there
is Nifong, Mike Nifong, the person who continues to mock you and
who claims that you "whitewashed" the investigation. Are
you telling us that there are no statutes in the law books of North
Carolina that don’t cover his actions? A prosecutor is free to make
up whatever he wants, continually change his stories, lie to judges
and everyone else, and then go scot-free? You are telling us that
that there is nothing you can do after the fact?
By the way,
your inaction against the perpetrators of these felonies has meant
they could get on with their lives. True, Nifong was disbarred,
but he is receiving his pension and so far he has been able to weasel
out of the lawsuits by declaring bankruptcy. As for Himan, he currently
is working for the police department of Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania.
A reporter who looked at Himan’s recommendations from Durham told
me that there was nothing about the lacrosse case in his files.
That is interesting.
Here is someone who refused even to look at the exculpatory evidence
that Reade Seligmann’s defense had in its files, yet then demanded
that Seligmann be prosecuted for "obstruction of justice"
for making the information public. (Nifong did not follow Himan’s
suggestion, but nonetheless you can see that Himan was willing to
use his authority for nefarious and illegal purposes – and you have
let him walk.)
Mark Gottlieb
was permitted to "retire" from the Durham police, Linwood
Wilson, who clearly was strong-arming witnesses and trying to force
them to sign false affidavits, also has avoided investigation. Levicy
left Durham and now is practicing her nursing profession in New
Hampshire, even though dozens of complaints were filed against her
to the North Carolina Board of Nursing, which has refused even to
open a complaint file against her.
All this tells
me that the fix was in. Drop the charges, and no one has to worry
about a thing. Mr. Cooper, these charges were a transparent lie,
and you knew that from the very first day you met with the attorneys
for the defense. There should have been no bargaining at all. None.
False charges have no place – no place – in the halls of justice,
and either you stand for justice or you do not.
It is true
that all of the people (and others) are facing lawsuits, but Reade
Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans were facing perhaps
the rest of their lives in prison, and had Nifong been able to move
this thing to trial, he almost certainly would have won a conviction
with a jury from Durham. The only thing that kept these lies
from trial was a one-vote margin on the committee of the
NC State Bar that voted to charge Nifong with ethical violations
while the case still was proceeding. And don’t forget that Nifong
had promised to charge every lacrosse player at Duke with
covering up the rape, which would have carried the same legal penalties
as one receives for rape and sexual assault. Every player and every
member of his family had to fear for their very lives, and you tell
me that you are helpless to investigate?
What
all of this tells me is that the authorities in North Carolina watch
out for their own. Other people – and they are legion, as you know
– can be falsely charged and convicted in North Carolina, but when
people with the right political and governmental connections break
the law openly and with impunity, they are sacrosanct. Why don’t
you ask Betsy Kelly or Darryl Hunt what it is like to spend years
in a North Carolina prison for crimes they never committed?
So, all I can
say is that there is unfinished business. It was Crystal Mangum
and her people who chose to come out of the closet and go public
with their charges. It was Michael Nifong who told his supporters
that you were a liar and a crook. You gave both of them every chance
and still they insist on lying. Perhaps it is time to do justice
in North Carolina, for Lady Justice has been asleep there for many
years. It is time that she be awakened.
October
24, 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.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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