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To: Ken H
Just saw MSNBC legal analyst Susan Filan on Tucker Carlson. Claimed that rape allegations are typically not taken seriously by police! Says the general attitude is, "Yeah, yeah."

It hasn't been an hour since I heard another "cable expert" say that prosecutors always make a strong presumption in favor of any accuser because, allegedly, women to not make false claims of race.

Let's face reality: These cable channels have a lot of time to fill. They'll drag an "expert" off the sidewalk if need be.

P.S. I also heard within the last couple of hours references to the defense timeline having been "exploded." LMAO What has been exploded is the new Time Magazine garbage attempting to take apart the timeline. Dan Abrahms had the hapless Time reporter on his show today. He eviscerated the poor slob.

387 posted on 04/27/2006 8:20:25 PM PDT by LK44-40
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To: LK44-40

NBC 17
Accuser In Duke Lacrosse Case Reported Previous Rape

POSTED: 7:30 pm EDT April 27, 2006
UPDATED: 10:47 pm EDT April 27, 2006

DURHAM, N.C. -- The woman who says she was raped by three members of Duke's lacrosse team also told police 10 years ago she was raped by three men, filing a 1996 complaint claiming she had been assaulted three years earlier when she was 14.

Authorities in nearby Creedmoor said Thursday that none of the men named in the decade-old report was ever charged but they didn't have details why.

A phone number for the accuser has been disconnected and her family declined to comment to The Associated Press. But relatives told Essence magazine in an online story this week that the woman declined to pursue the case out of fear for her safety.

The existence of the report surprised defense attorneys, one of whom has sought information about the accuser's past for use in attacking her credibility.

"That's the very first I've heard of that," said Bill Cotter, the attorney for indicted lacrosse player Collin Finnerty, who along with fellow Duke sophomore Reade Seligmann is charged with first-degree rape, kidnapping and sexual assault. He declined additional comment.

Attorneys for Seligmann asked the court this week to order the state to turn over the accuser's medical, legal and education records, and hold a pretrial hearing to "determine if the complaining witness is even credible enough to provide reliable testimony."

The accuser, a 27-year-old student at North Carolina Central University in Durham, told police she was hired to perform as a stripper at a March 13 party, where she was raped by three men.

According to the Creedmoor police report in August 1996, when the woman was 18, she told officers she was raped and beaten by three men "for a continual time" in 1993, when she was 14. She told police she was attacked at an "unspecified location" on a street in Creedmoor, a town 15 miles northeast of Durham.

The report lists the names of the three men, but no other details. Creedmoor police Chief Ted Pollard said Thursday he had no recollection of the report, and his staff has been unable to find any additional information about it.

Durham police Officer Brian Bishop, who interviewed the accuser in 1996 while working on the Creedmoor force, said Thursday he had a vague recollection of the report but couldn't remember any details.

When asked about the accuser's previous report of rape, Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong declined to comment.

Before Seligmann and Finnerty were indicted, attorneys for the players pointed to the accuser's criminal history when answering questions about their clients' legal troubles. The woman pleaded guilty to several misdemeanors in 2002.

The mother of the accuser said that her daughter has been approached by a group called the New Black Panther Party for Self-Defense. She said that her daughter has not received any death threats, nor has she asked for the group's help in any way.

The group is apparently passing out fliers around Durham and plans to hold a rally on Durham's campus on Monday.

The New Black Panthers were founded in 1990 by Aaron Michaels. The current leader is Malik Zulu Shabazz, and its headquarters is in Washington, D.C.

There is no indication that the New Black Panther Party for Self-Defense is linked to the militant group the Black Panthers, which was very active in the 1960s and 1970s


391 posted on 04/27/2006 8:22:02 PM PDT by Howlin
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To: LK44-40
"They'll drag an "expert" off the sidewalk if need be."

In this context, "expert" is defined as someone you have never seen before.

522 posted on 04/27/2006 9:31:33 PM PDT by El Gran Salseron (The FR Canteen's Resident Equal Opportunity Male Chauvinist Pig! :-))
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