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Pinging with Saturday Morning's NandO story

http://www.newsobserver.com/100/story/454117.html

Woman altered stories of rape
A Duke player's attorney makes public a report saying the accuser was inconsistent

Benjamin Niolet and Joseph Neff, Staff Writers

DURHAM - Hours after a March 13 Duke University lacrosse team party, the woman who said players raped her that night told police changing stories.

An officer at Duke Hospital wrote in a report released Friday that the accuser said she was one of four women who danced at the party; every other account of that night says only two women danced.

The woman said that night that five men sexually assaulted her; District Attorney Mike Nifong and investigators have said there were three.

Durham police officer G.D. Sutton noted that the woman also said at one point that she had not been raped. "While being interviewed at Duke, her story changed several times," the officer wrote in a report.

That document was attached to a letter that a defense attorney sent to an investigator in Nifong's office Friday and copied to reporters. The day before, the investigator, Linwood Wilson, interrupted lawyer Joseph B. Cheshire V as he talked at a news conference Thursday after Nifong gave hundreds of pages of evidence to defense attorneys. Wilson asked to see the document that stated the woman had changed her story.

"Since you are the District Attorney's Investigator, the press could have assumed -- falsely, as it turns out -- that you had actually read your file," Cheshire wrote in his letter to Wilson. "I can only assume your motivation in questioning my assertion was simply ignorance. A simple reading of your file might solve that problem in the future."

The letter was another escalation in the continuing public acrimony between Nifong's office and defense attorneys. Cheshire represents David Evans, one of three indicted lacrosse players.

The report, one of 536 pages handed over to the defense at a court hearing Thursday, is another piece of evidence made public by the defense that could cast doubt on the reliability of the woman, an escort service dancer. Her testimony might be the most important part of Nifong's case.

Evidence made public

North Carolina has rarely, if ever, seen criminal evidence spill so rapidly into the public eye. Police reports, handwritten witness statements and reports on photo identification lineups have all become public.

This steady flow is a direct result of a 2004 law that forces prosecutors to share all their evidence with defendants. Lawmakers made the change after several cases in which prosecutors withheld such material, particularly in the case of former death row inmate Alan Gell. Prosecutors withheld statements showing Gell was in jail when the murder occurred.

Under the old law, Cheshire said, "We would get this evidence when the trial started, if at all."

Nifong has said he has always provided the type of evidence now required by law. Efforts to reach Nifong and Wilson failed Friday.

The accuser has been in hiding for months and could not be reached. The News & Observer generally does not identify people who report that they have been sexually assaulted.

Court filings

Nifong has stopped discussing the case, but lawyers representing the three players have stepped up their attacks through court filings that question the accuser's credibility and Nifong's case. The police report, an account of the early morning hours of March 14, adds to the list of apparent problems with the case against the three lacrosse players.

Evans, 23, of Bethesda, Md., Collin Finnerty, 19, of Garden City, N.Y. and Reade Seligmann, 20, of Essex Fells, N.J., each face charges of rape, sexual offense and kidnapping.

The lawyers say that no rape or assault happened at the party and that for at least Seligmann, bank machine photos and the testimony of a cab driver would help show he could not have committed a rape.

The woman has given, by Cheshire's count, at least a half-dozen different accounts to police, doctors and nurses. The woman first said she was raped to someone at a mental health facility where police took her for detoxification. At Duke Hospital, her story changed several times:

* She told police she was dancing at a party with three other women when she was pulled into a bathroom and raped by five men.

* She told another police officer that she had been groped by some men in front of the house at 610 N. Buchanan Blvd. but had not been raped.

* She told a doctor that three men had assaulted her vaginally.

* She told a nurse that three men had assaulted her vaginally, anally and orally.

* She told the same nurse that two men had assaulted her.

The taxi driver

In an interview Friday, Cheshire said much of the evidence handed over Thursday duplicates documents previously turned over or consists of the players' academic records.

Cheshire said he was struck that police apparently had not investigated the escort services where the two dancers worked, yet they conducted an extensive investigation of a taxi driver whose sworn statement is part of Seligmann's alibi.

When news of the investigation broke in March, protests erupted and Nifong told interviewers that he was sure a crime occurred. Nifong has not changed his mind. But even Nifong supporters are shifting their opinions.

"Unless he has a player from the team who is going to testify that this rape occurred, there is no way he will win this case and there is no way this case should have ever been brought," said Mark Edwards, a Durham criminal defense lawyer. Edwards appeared in an advertisement on Nifong's behalf during the prosecutor's successful campaign in the Democratic primary for district attorney.

Staff writer Benjamin Niolet can be reached at 956-2404 or bniolet@newsobserver.com.


1,120 posted on 06/24/2006 12:51:31 AM PDT by abb (If it Ain't Posted on FreeRepublic, it Ain't News)
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To: All; abb

thanks abb!

This is interesting, as I think the Cab-driver intimidation has the best chance of getting traction with the public:


"Cheshire said he was struck that police apparently had not investigated the escort services where the two dancers worked, yet they conducted an extensive investigation of a taxi driver whose sworn statement is part of Seligmann's alibi."


1,121 posted on 06/24/2006 1:06:15 AM PDT by Mike Nifong (Somebody Stop Me !)
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From the N&O article in #1120

The day before, the investigator, Linwood Wilson, interrupted lawyer Joseph B. Cheshire V as he talked at a news conference Thursday after Nifong gave hundreds of pages of evidence to defense attorneys. Wilson asked to see the document that stated the woman had changed her story.

[snip]

"Cheshire said he was struck that police apparently had not investigated the escort services where the two dancers worked, yet they conducted an extensive investigation of a taxi driver whose sworn statement is part of Seligmann's alibi."

______________________________________________

[Note to self-- Linwood Wilson is the guy who investigated the cab driver Cheshire is referring to]

______________________________________________

A lawyer for Seligmann, Ernest Conner of Greenville, was quoted Thursday as saying the misdemeanor arrest was an apparent attempt to intimidate Elmostafa in the lacrosse case. But Linwood Wilson, an investigator for the Durham District Attorney's Office, denied the allegation.

Wilson said the warrant originally was sworn out by a Hecht's security guard, long before the lacrosse incident arose. And when officers attempted to serve the warrant nearly three years ago, Elmostafa could not be found, according to Wilson.

But when the cabbie began giving interviews about the lacrosse case, authorities finally were able to track him down, Wilson added.

"When I did a record check on him, I found there was this unserved warrant," he said. "It was my obligation to have it served. If I had not had it served, there would be people complaining about that, too. It had nothing to do with trying to intimidate the man."

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1653541/posts?page=1030#1030

1,125 posted on 06/24/2006 2:00:28 AM PDT by Ken H
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To: abb

Thanks for the ping. The News and Observer's slogan should be, "If it happens in Durham, it's news to us" Old joke, but plainly applicable.

I get so tired of hearing the commentators say, "We don't really know what went on that night, do we?" Well, no we don't, but sadly neither do the police, nor the D.A., and most unfortunately, neither does the AV.

The most chilling comment I have heard come from Nifong was contained in his e-mail to Newsweek where he stated that it didn't matter what anybody else thought -- he only had to convince 12 jurors. That summed up this man completely, and I'm not sure that he doesn't speak for most prosecutors in this country. It's not about justice, it's about what I can convince 12 people of. That's our legal system in a nutshell. He doesn't have to put the entire evidence out for examination, just what he thinks he'll need to get a conviction. We all need to think about that long and hard and try to get a good night's sleep.


1,132 posted on 06/24/2006 6:13:50 AM PDT by Constitutions Grandchild
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To: abb

Do you know, or does anyone else know, if this reporter has been given any of the information collected so far? Just a thought...


1,133 posted on 06/24/2006 6:22:59 AM PDT by TommyDale (Stop the Nifongery!)
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To: abb; Mike Nifong; Protect the Bill of Rights; All

In OTHER news:

http://www.herald-sun.com/durham/4-747000.html



Deputies seize drugs, guns, cash


Jun 23, 2006 : 9:31 pm ET

DURHAM -- The Durham Sheriff's Anti-Crime Narcotics Unit seized more than 2.5 pounds of marijuana, 1.5 ounces of cocaine, nine guns and a stack of cash from a house at 8715 N. Roxboro Road, according to Lt. Derek O'Mary.

O'Mary said an investigation led deputies to raid the house, which was occupied by 32-year-old James Wheeler Mangum.


(snip)


1,136 posted on 06/24/2006 6:41:41 AM PDT by maggief (and the dessert cart rolls on ...)
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To: abb; Mike Nifong
This steady flow is a direct result of a 2004 law that forces prosecutors to share all their evidence with defendants. Lawmakers made the change after several cases in which prosecutors withheld such material, particularly in the case of former death row inmate Alan Gell. Prosecutors withheld statements showing Gell was in jail when the murder occurred.

Should I be surprised discovery is some "new-fangled" thing to NC? And that Alan Gell case? OMG.

WTFIIWNC???????

1,223 posted on 06/24/2006 3:07:28 PM PDT by stands2reason (Rivers will run dry and mountains will crumble, but two wrongs will never make a right.)
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