Posted on 10/07/2006 3:47:57 AM PDT by abb
In Duke rape case, deep questions about prosecutor's discretion
By ALLEN G. BREED, AP National Writer October 7, 2006 12:06 am
DURHAM, N.C. -- There's not much middle ground in the legal community when it comes to opinions of local prosecutor Mike Nifong's most famous case.
His law school classmate Patricia McDonald, citing "an utter lack of evidence that a crime even occurred," wrote to Gov. Mike Easley and urged him to pressure Nifong into stepping aside in the Duke University lacrosse rape case.
"Mr. Nifong has lost his moral compass despite his claim that he is a `committed advocate for the truth,'" wrote McDonald, a former assistant in the Maryland Attorney General's office.
That's not the Durham County district attorney whom John Bourlon knows.
The criminal defense lawyer has faced off against Nifong hundreds of times over the past three decades. He's seen the prosecutor drop a weak case the day before trial.
Despite the supposed flimsiness of the evidence in the Duke case, Bourlon keeps coming to the same conclusion:
"I'm CONVINCED he has something."
Untold hours of television air time and countless drums of ink have been spent parsing what the Duke case -- with its three white, private-college defendants and the poor, black stripper who accused them -- says about race and class in our society.
More recently, the question has been: What does the case say about the fairness of our justice system -- and the power of those who run it?
If the American legal system is a machine, the prosecutor is the On/Off switch. The prosecutor decides whether a person should be charged with a crime and, if so, which among a wide array of statutes should be used. Ultimately, it's his choice whether to go to trial or drop the case.
These are decisions, of course, that can upend a person's life, says Joshua Marquis, a vice president of the National District Attorneys Association. "Accusing a man of sexual misconduct ... is just about the worst scarlet letter you can paint on somebody. And there is enormous responsibility that comes with that."
Nifong's critics say he has abused his discretion, prejudicing the case with unethically loose talk, stubbornly refusing to acknowledge contradictions in the accuser's statements and ignoring strong exculpatory evidence. The players' defense lawyers accuse Nifong of using the case to woo black voters in a tight election.
But fellow prosecutors say the job's wide discretion cuts both ways.
"What happens if he decides, `I'm not going to present it to the grand jury. I'm going to play judge and jury, and these guys are going to walk'?" says Charles M. Hatcher Jr., a former West Virginia prosecutor who successfully overcame a misconduct complaint. "Damned if he does and damned if he doesn't."
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The particulars of the Duke case were an explosive mix to begin with:
Black accuser, white athletes. Southern town, walled campus. Racial epithets. Protest rallies. National media.
Then Nifong lit the fuse.
In the weeks following the March 13 party where the alleged rape occurred, Nifong referred to the players in interviews as "hooligans" used to having "expensive lawyers" get them out of trouble. He denounced the "blue wall of silence" that had supposedly formed around the perpetrators and said DNA would reveal exactly who had committed the rape.
Even after DNA tests failed to establish a link between the players and the woman, Nifong took the case to the grand jury, which returned indictments against three men: Dave Evans, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann.
Defense lawyers and bloggers have been picking apart his case ever since.
The alleged victim -- a single mother who attends historically black North Carolina Central University -- has told at least a dozen different versions of her story, by one defense lawyer's count. Toxicology tests failed to show she was given a date-rape drug, as Nifong suggested in one article. Seligmann's attorney says Nifong refused to look at cell phone logs, ATM video and taxicab receipts that supposedly prove his client couldn't have committed the crime.
Nifong's public statements "almost certainly" violated a state bar rule that forbids prosecutors from making comments outside court that have "a substantial likelihood of heightening public condemnation of the accused," wrote K.C. Johnson on the Web log Durham-in-Wonderland.
"Few prosecutors in history have publicized their case and condemned potential defendants as egregiously as Nifong did," wrote Johnson, a Brooklyn College constitutional history professor.
Suggesting that Nifong was grasping at anything to keep his case alive, critics noted that the second dancer at the party allegedly changed her story after the prosecutor personally intervened to have her bail reduced in an old embezzlement case. Others faulted the supervising detective's 33-page report -- which was handed over to the defense four months after the alleged attack, and which contradicts what the rape nurse and others remembered about the accuser's early statements.
"There is almost no evidence that could be construed as corroborating the alleged victim's accusations," says Rob Warden, director of Northwestern University Law Center on Wrongful Convictions. "The prosecutor appears to have acted precipitously, without due consideration of evidence to the contrary -- evidence that does not fit into their theory."
Chastened by the attacks, and by a judge's order to limit "extrajudicial" comments, the 56-year-old prosecutor has ceased giving interviews, though he has used court appearances to rebut his critics.
During a recent evidentiary hearing, Nifong shot to his feet when Evans' attorney Brad Bannon suggested that the prosecution had "very little evidence" other than the accuser's word.
"Your honor," Nifong said, "I object to his characterization of my case."
On his campaign Web site, alongside photos of his wife, son, and Australian shepherd, Tillie, Nifong defends himself against allegations of misconduct.
"I have never understood why any prosecutor would try to gain an advantage at trial by concealing evidence from the defendant," he wrote, saying he began giving "open-file discovery" to all defense attorneys 20 years before the state legislature required it.
"And that is why I have never had a conviction overturned for violating a defendant's right to discover the State's case against him."
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Television may conjure a "gladiatorial" image of the justice system -- "two fevered champions of the truth as they see it ... going into battle," says Marquis, the National District Attorneys Association official. The reality, he says, is less noble.
"I've been a defense lawyer," says Marquis, a prosecutor in Astoria, Ore. "Your job is to protect the guilty. ... Vigorous defense of a defendant is never sanctioned. Overly vigorous prosecution is."
Until a recent state Supreme Court decision limiting their power to control the court calendar, North Carolina prosecutors were considered among the most powerful in the nation. Even with the change, district attorneys retain broad discretion.
"The prosecutor is the de facto law after an arrest, deciding whether to charge the suspect with committing a crime, what charge to file from a range of possibilities, whether to offer a pretrial deal, and, if so, the terms of the deal," wrote the authors of "Harmful Error," a 2003 study on prosecutorial misconduct by the Center for Public Integrity.
Researchers found more than 2,000 cases from the previous three decades in which judges and appellate court panels cited prosecutorial misconduct as a factor when dismissing charges, reversing convictions or reducing sentences.
They found thousands more cases in which judges labeled prosecutorial behavior inappropriate but "harmless," and upheld convictions.
Of the 44 cases the center found in which prosecutors were brought up on disciplinary charges, 12 had their licenses suspended and two were disbarred.
Going after a law license is the only way to punish prosecutors' harmful missteps, says Warden of Northwestern's wrongful-convictions center.
"Our law makes prosecutors immune from civil liability in these cases," he says. "So no matter how egregious their misconduct, basically they can't be sued. And so there's no price to pay."
Hatcher's case was dismissed, but not without a price, he says. A former assistant DA in Cabell County, W.Va., Hatcher was accused of failing to disclose exculpatory evidence in a kidnapping and sexual assault case -- specifically, that the accusers had been hypnotized. Although a disciplinary board dismissed the charges for lack of evidence, Hatcher says defending himself "cost me as much as I'd made" in 20 years as a prosecutor.
Insisting that true prosecutorial misconduct is rare, Marquis argues the prosecutor is the only member of the legal profession whose "sole allegiance is to the truth" -- even if it means "torpedoing" his own case.
"One of the luxuries of being a prosecutor is the ability to look at a case at any stage of the proceedings and say, `You know what? Ixnay.'"
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To believe that Nifong is blindly forging ahead with a bogus case simply to get elected to a job he had to be nudged into taking (he was appointed when a previous D.A. became a judge) goes against what colleagues and even courtroom adversaries have said about him: That he's fair and apolitical.
Bourlon says Nifong, a former math teacher and social worker who went to work in the DA's office 28 years ago as an unpaid assistant, is not that kind of prosecutor.
"He doesn't hold cards back and play games," says Bourlon. "It's just not his way."
And he does dismiss cases; his office last year dropped 44 percent of all felony charges it filed, before they went to trial.
While Warden doesn't think Nifong can win a conviction in the Duke case, he concedes that the district attorney is under no ethical obligation to drop it "if he thinks the person is guilty."
After an indictment has been returned, it can be tough to walk away from a case, notes the prosecutor in another high-profile rape case, Mark Hurlbert of Eagle County, Colo., who brought charges against NBA star Kobe Bryant in 2003.
"Your ethical burden does not outweigh this feeling, that you put the time and effort into this case. You want to see it through," says Hurlbert, who dropped the charges against Bryant when the accuser, battered by defense leaks and media scrutiny, withdrew her cooperation.
"We were ready to go to trial," says Hurlbert, who adds he hasn't seen anything yet that makes him think Nifong should drop his case or appoint a special prosecutor.
Gov. Easley, meanwhile, has no intention of asking Nifong to step aside, spokeswoman Sherri Johnson says.
Nifong, facing election in November, says he expects to go to trial next spring, and he intends to prosecute the case himself -- if he's still in office. URL for this article: http://www.heraldsun.com/state/6-776437.html
I read it; those people are truly pi$$ed, aren't they?
To put it mildly, lol. The AP story is running widely now. Just in time for Sunday papers all over the United States...
How? If this article is correct, he is immune from prosecution and the only potential penalty is loss of his law license.
I recall from a long ago thread that one of the legal eagle Freepers said that he has limited immunity. What that meant is that he was immune while performing within his job description. It was speculated that giving 50 interviews with news media was not within his job description and he was not protected by his limited immunity for those kind of actions. Sounded fair to me but I don't know what the law really says.
LOL! Wonder if the boys will think Mike has a purty mouth?
Posted: Oct 7 2006, 12:27 PM
Since editor Sill and the gang refuse to answer the real questions at the N&O Editor's blog
there is an upcoming event where local residents could get some face time with the staff of the N&O. The State Fair begins next weekend and the N&O usually has a booth set-up there.
At last year's State Fair
"Come see us: The N&O booth is on the Kiddleland side of Dorton Area, right across from the Field of Dreams dome."
http://blogs.newsobserver.com/fair/index.p...g=29&m=20051020
If they're not going to respond to the brilliant questions posted on their blogs perhaps they'll respond, when confronted with the facts, in person?
2006 N.C. State Fair October 13th 22nd
[snip]
Those readers, in the best citizen journalist tradition, are exposing the falsehoods in the N&O's original Mar. 25 story. They're also refuting and exposing point-by-point the self-serving, incomplete and misleading justifications Williams made in her post and Sill has made on the comment thread.
You don't want to miss it.
I plan to leave a comment at the N&O and another here tonight.
http://www.newsobserver.com/102/story/421799.html (original March 25 N&O story)
Best I can tell, Melanie and Linda haven't figured out who they're dealing with. They think we all are the typical 6th to 8th grade reader newspapers publish for. They haven't figured out we know more about this case save the defense team. It's a cinch we know more than the NandO and the prosecution...
Updated: Oct. 7, 2006, 6:24 PM ET
Duke lacrosse team back on field for charity event
Associated Press
ROCKVILLE CENTRE, N.Y. -- Duke's lacrosse team returned to the field Saturday, playing a series of scrimmages at a charity event on Long Island. -jump-
"It's the Duke rape hoax," Zash [mother] said. "The [players] haven't changed their story at all -- not one line, not one word has been changed. I don't think the alleged victim can say the same thing. This has brought the parents together in a way that nobody would ever want to be bonded together. We all need this [season] -- the parents, the kids who graduated, and the kids on the field."
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/news/story?id=2616773
ping
Mrs. Zash refers to this case as the "Duke rape hoax". Yet, the C-Girls on CTV think that Matt Zash is Nifong's secret star witness.
Maybe it will be a padded cell?
LOL.
"This is the staff of the Durham District Attorney's Office - the largest, most diverse, best educated, and most capable collection of people ever assembled under that title."
Boy I have been a little busy with work. Let's see if I can summarize what I have missed in the last few days and correct me if I am wrong:
1. The N&O has been covering up what Mangum said about Pittman's [aka Robert's] actions that night. I would assume the defense will investigate forcing that report to testify at least in a deposition? The hearsay rule will not hold as statements against your own interest, ie the current Mangum story, is an exception.
2. In the AP story to start this thread they qote various prosecutors wanting us to believe a prosecutor can not be sanctioned. I am sure they can be. I sure would like to see Nifong bankrupted by legal proceedings if nothing else after this.
3. Bourlon is a Dim contributor given to Harvey Gantt, John Edwards among others.
Expert says lacrosse ID's were likely tainted due to Nifong and DPD's procedural violations. Also Crystal twice ID'd one player as being at the party and he was in Raleigh and wasn't there. She misidentified the player who made the broomstick comment. She also identified 15 players as being at the party in one line-up and failed to ID any of them in the next lineup. And on and on. Unbelievable.
http://www.newsobserver.com/102/story/496369.html
This article, though making some excellent points also is indicative of the well documented bias the N&O has against the players.
With all of the known evidence which is clearly exculpatory for RS, why do they continue to show his picture alongside articles about the alleged rape? They continue to perpetrate this fraud, taint the jury pool and injure this human being and his family by continuously associating his image with stories about rape...
All the while protecting the AV from herself by filtering her own words as "unsubstantiated"..
Could the editor's words vs. their actions be any more transparent?
Facts are stubborn things. The media can spin to a fare thee well, but that will not change the fact the this line up was a fraud. The article adds interesting details (e.g. could only identify 1 person in the original, and that person was in Raleigh). The more you hear about these line ups, the worse it gets and I suspect we don't even know the half of it. For example, does anyone believe that DPD did not coax the FA to pick out the 3 specific players? Their track history with Duke students sure suggests they would. Yet, the FA still picked out 4 (wanna bet that 4th she picked out was also out of town that night?). Even in a multiple choice test with no wrong answers, the FA got it wrong.
This line up will be the key event in (1) dismissal of charges or outright acquittal and (2) subsequent civil lawsuits for deprivation of civil rights.
Neff reveals the first player she selected in the April 4 lineup.
When she came to the photograph of Matt Wilson, she stared at the screen for a minute.
"Did you recognize that person?" asked Gottlieb.
"He looked like Bret but I'm not sure," she said.
http://www.newsobserver.com/1185/story/496321.html
Please add me to your ping list.
It looks to me like we are in chat on this thread already. These two stories on the faulty IDs are really news. Perhaps abb or Howlin or other keepers of the ping list could start a new thread on the news side so more people read these articles.
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