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The Duke case is a DEMOCRAT scandal
Renew America ^ | October 17, 2006 | Michael Gaynor

Posted on 12/30/2006 2:19:52 PM PST by freespirited

"60 Minutes" never mentioned during is two-part segment on the Duke case broadcast last Sunday night that the Duke case is a Democrat scandal. But, IT IS! Durham County, North Carolina is a Democrat bastion; Durham County's appointed District Attorney Michael B. Nifong is a Democrat; the North Carolina Governor (Michael Easley) who appointed Mr. Nifong is a Democrat; and North Carolina Attorney General (Roy Cooper) who has not intervened in the interests of justice, is a Democrat.

After the "60 Minutes" Duke case expose, responsible (and smart) Democrats will stand for justice instead of stand with Mr. Nifong.

"60 Minutes" DID make it clear that (1) the Duke case is baseless (that is, none of the Duke Three committed any of the felonies on which Mr. Nifong had them indicted by a grand jury that was misled by Mr. Nifong), (2) Mr. Nifong engaged in egregious prosecutorial misconduct in the Duke case (that is, he refused to consider evidence of innocence before seeking indictments and he ordered a photo identification procedure that violated local, state and federal guidelines, to give two examples), and (3) Mr. Nifong, in Ed Bradley's words, "played up the racial aspects of the case" while waging a "hotly contested election campaign...in a city with a large black population" (that is, Mr. Nifong used the Duke case to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat to keep his job by playing the race card and manipulating enough black votes to win a plurality of the votes).

As Sports Illustrated reported, Mr. Nifong "polled 2 to 1 among African-American voters [as against Freda Brown], an advantage that more than accounted for his victory margin of 883 votes."

To his credit, a Democrat- Lewis Cheek, a Democrat County Commissioner, came forward to offer Durham County voters an alternative to Mr. Nifong. (Not all Democrats automatically back a rogue, because he's a Democrat rogue.)

Unfortunately, a Republican is helping Mr. Nifong instead of helping the people of Durham County.

As I have asserted repeatedly, Steve Monks, the Republican Party Chairman in Durham County, North Carolina should cease and desist his efforts to split the anti-Nifong vote by asking voters to write in his name instead of vote for Mr. Cheek as the viable alternative to Mr. Nifong. Both Mr. Cheek and Mr. Monks tried to collect enough signatures to get on the ballot via petition. Mr. Cheek succeeded; Mr. Monks did not. Mr. Cheek is the viable Anybody But Nifong, not Mr. Monks. Under ordinary circumstances, as a conservative Republican, I'd probably favor Mr. Monks. These are not ordinary circumstances, however. Durham County's appointed District Attorney. Michael B. Nifong, is a rogue prosecutor who should have been removed from the Duke case long ago by the court and should be rejected by the Durham County voters on November 7. Mr. Nifong is so abominable that the right thing for conservatives and Republicans to do is to vote for Mr. Cheek, who already has announced that he will give North Carolina's Governor, Michael Easley, another chance to appoint a respectable person to serve as Durham County District Attorney.

In Durham, there are still some who treat Crystal Gail Mangum, the accuser of the Duke Three, and Mr. Nifong, as the victims instead of the victimizers and demand a trial, even though the law requires sufficient evidence to warrant a trial and it surely seems to be lacking. The prosecution's production suggests malicious prosecution in process, not a legitimate prosecution. The prosecution does not have credible evidence to support a guilty verdict. There is no DNA evidence. There is no witness to confirm Ms. Mangum's accusation. Ms. Mangum's contradictory statements and her criminal, medical and employment history make believing her a leap of faith instead of an act of logic. The prosecution is a persecution, and the persecution should be stopped. Prolonging it because Mr. Nifong wants to be elected, or because the some people are pleased with the notion of an ex-convict stripper like Ms. Mangum having a jury decide her claim against people like the Duke Three, is perverted, not principled.

Barry Saunders, a News & Observer staff writer, watched the Duke case segment on "60 Minutes" and was moved to write an article titled "Lacrosse episode was lame."

By lame, Mr. Saunders apparently meant " lacking needful or desirable substance."

It is the prosecution's case that is lame, as "60 Minutes" showed.

Mr. Saunders is still upset that Ed Bradley asked Kathleen Willey whether former President Clinton aroused her.

"'Was he aroused?'

"I certainly wasn't, and it's doubtful that anyone else with a thimbleful of knowledge of the Duke lacrosse rape case was, either, after watching the hugely hyped '60 Minutes' episode about the case Sunday.

"Correspondent Ed Bradley, forever immortalized by some — OK, maybe just me — as the journalist who in 1998 asked Kathleen Willey if President Clinton was 'aroused' when he allegedly placed her hand where it didn't belong, broke no new ground and, except for showing what was allegedly the alleged victim gyrating onstage after the alleged incident, shed no new light on any aspect of the Duke case."

Mr. Bradley broke new ground. He introduced America to each of the Duke Three and demonstrated that they are not the racist rapists some want people to believe, but innocent victims. He elicited from Reade Seligmann that neither the police nor the prosecution had talked to him about what allegedly happened at what Mr. Seligmann called a "boring" party last year. He interviewed the other exotic dancer (aka stripper) and she said that (1) none of the Duke Three had used racial epithets, (2) Ms. Mangum had not looked or behaved like she had been assaulted and (3) Ms. Mangum's version of what had happened was contrary to what she remembered. (Mr. Nifong won't be calling Ms. Mangum as a prosecution witness and has no one confirming Ms. Mangum's claim.)

As for "showing what was allegedly the alleged victim gyrating onstage after the alleged incident," THAT not only impeached Ms. Mangum's claims, but it sent a message that Ms. Mangum has been thoroughly investigated and the truth about her that is pertinent to the case will come out if there is a trial. (That video was made weeks BEFORE the first two indictments. Imagine what subsequent investigation discovered.)

Mr. Saunders portrayed Mr. Nifong as a hard-working who shames the press:

"When a pack of reporters cornered Durham District Attorney Mike Nifong on Monday afternoon at Durham police headquarters and asked whether he had watched the show that portrayed his prosecution of the case as politically motivated, Nifong said, 'No.'

"He then scolded us for even asking about it at a news conference at which an arrest was announced in a 2005 Durham quadruple homicide case.

"Perhaps we should, as Nifong said, be ashamed, but the DA's public comments have been rare since his initial expansiveness about the case."

Mr. Saunders referred in his article not only to Mr. Nifong's "initial expansiveness," but to "possible prosecutorial overzealousness." (He has a way with euphemisms.)

"60 Minutes":

"[Duke Law Professor James] Coleman found that while many of the players [at the lacrosse team party] drank alcohol excessively, they had no history of violent or racist behavior. Professor Coleman believes that the three indicted players are victims in this case — victims of an overzealous prosecutor who pandered to the black community in the middle of an election campaign.

"'I think that he pandered to the community by saying "I'm gonna go out there and defend your interests in seeing that these hooligans who committed the crime are prosecuted. I'm not gonna let their fathers, with all of their money, buy you know big-time lawyers and get them off. I'm doing this for you." You know, what are you to conclude about a prosecutor who says to you, "I'll do whatever it takes to get this set of defendants?" What does it say about what he's willing to do to get poor black defendants,' Coleman asks.

"Asked if he thinks the D.A. committed prosecutorial misconduct, Coleman says, 'Yes, I mean I think that's the whole point. And if this case resulted in a conviction, I think there would be a basis to have the conviction overturned based on his conduct.

Mr. Saunders was unimpressed:

"No doubt '60 Minutes' sold a lot of cars and soap for CBS on Sunday. People from across the country called me to ask whether I was watching it. With Bradley's kid-gloves treatment of Kim Roberts, the show might have solidified in some people's minds the belief that the charges are without merit."

Is Mr. Saunders' mind?

Jason Whitlock, who writes for the McClatchy newspapers, saw the same program as Mr. Saunders and wrote "It's time for justice: drop the charges vs. Duke lacrosse players."

To Mr. Saunders, what Mr. Whitlock wrote might come as a shock:

"The charges against the Duke lacrosse players should be dropped immediately, and the people demanding the dismissal the loudest and most forcefully should be the very people who have made a living allegedly fighting against racial injustice.

I"'ve said this before, but it's worth saying again: Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton should be in Durham, N.C., today, promising civil disobedience until the charges are dropped and prosecutor Mike Nifong resigns.

"Ed Bradley and '60 Minutes' should never be mistaken for Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court. Bradley is just a TV reporter and '60 Minutes' is just a TV show, but you couldn't help but be moved by the story they aired Sunday night about the Duke lacrosse rape allegations."

Mr. Saunders could!

"The three accused players gave their first interviews, and two of them claimed they had airtight, documented alibis. The accuser's one-night sidekick, Kim Roberts, seems to have settled on telling the truth rather than trying to spin the story for fame or money. She contradicted several of the statements the accuser gave to police.

"'60 Minutes' obtained footage of the accuser working a stripper pole two short weeks after allegedly being brutally raped and beaten by three men and exposed the unfairness of the photo lineup used to ID the suspects.

"It was powerful stuff.

"The piece left you with two overwhelming beliefs: 1. Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty and David Evans did not rape the accuser; 2. There's no possible way the district attorney can win a conviction.

"Either belief is justification for dropping the charges.

"When you toss in the players' claims that the prosecutor won't even grant them an audience to hear their exculpatory evidence and the racially charged nature of the investigation, the case rises to a level where people concerned about blind, equal and fair justice should get involved.

"Anyone who has been mistreated by law enforcement or had a friend or family member treated unjustly by our criminal-courts system should be concerned about what is transpiring in Durham.

"It is true that the Duke lacrosse players are from wealthy families and can afford attorneys who probably will win an acquittal or dismissal.

"But there is nothing to be gained and plenty to be lost by showing indifference to their plight.

"Had '60 Minutes' aired the same story about three black Duke basketball players being railroaded by a prosecutor pandering to white voters and a white accuser with zero credibility, we all know where Jackson and Sharpton would be — right where they should be today. In Durham, asking the prosecutor to do the right thing.

"It is in the best interest of all black people, especially poor black people, that black people with a voice and a platform call for an end to the persecution of the Duke lacrosse players and program.

"Speaking out in support of the wealthy Duke players enhances our credibility when we claim that someone poor and black is being treated unfairly. Poor people need that credibility because they can't afford to make bail, let alone a team of high-priced attorneys.

"By remaining silent about this obvious miscarriage of justice, black leadership looks as racist and cowardly as it paints white people who ignore obvious mistreatment of blacks.

"You follow?"

Mr. Saunders does not follow. But Mr. Whitlock is absolutely right. It's time to stand up to Mr. Nifong instead of stand by him.

As Mr. Whitlock concluded: "Standing up for Seligmann, Finnerty and Evans would be standing up against injustice, and what we're learning is that injustice recognizes opportunity more than color. In America, there is more opportunity for injustice to visit poor people of color. Their best defense is standing against all injustice, regardless of race."

Amen!

Mr. Whitlock is calling for the fulfillment of Dr. Martin Luther King's dream: "I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."

Mr. Saunders is sticking by Ms. Mangum (who is not credible or confirmed) and Mr. Nifong (who bamboozled enough black voters last May to win a plurality of the votes in a Democrat primary).

Which gentleman do YOU think is right?


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: dukelax; nifong; prosecutorialabuse
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Durham County, North Carolina is a Democrat bastion; Durham County's appointed District Attorney Michael B. Nifong is a Democrat; the North Carolina Governor (Michael Easley) who appointed Mr. Nifong is a Democrat; and North Carolina Attorney General (Roy Cooper) who has not intervened in the interests of justice, is a Democrat.

And the only elected officials who *have* taken a stand against this outrage--Congressman Walter Jones and State Rep. Stephen LaRoque--are Republicans. I'm shocked, I'm telling 'ya!

1 posted on 12/30/2006 2:19:55 PM PST by freespirited
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To: freespirited
Michael B. Nifong is a Democrat

Oh no, he is NOT !!!

Is he really ?

2 posted on 12/30/2006 2:22:25 PM PST by HarmlessLovableFuzzball
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To: freespirited
""60 Minutes" never mentioned during is two-part segment on the Duke case broadcast last Sunday night that the Duke case is a Democrat scandal. But, IT IS! Durham County, North Carolina is a Democrat bastion; Durham County's appointed District Attorney Michael B. Nifong is a Democrat; the North Carolina Governor (Michael Easley) who appointed Mr. Nifong is a Democrat; and North Carolina Attorney General (Roy Cooper) who has not intervened in the interests of justice, is a Democrat."
And '60 minutes" is staffed [and stuffed] with Democrats. Why did Michael Gaynor break the logical sequence?
3 posted on 12/30/2006 2:22:32 PM PST by GSlob
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To: freespirited

If Nifong didn't run with a (D) next to his name on the ballot, and wasn't appointed by one, then I don't think of it as a "Democrat scandal". But it's interesting that he is a Democrat.


4 posted on 12/30/2006 2:31:23 PM PST by Mount Athos
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To: freespirited

laden as the case is with class envy and racial opportunism, how could it not be Democrat? Although I find a lot to condemn about the players' activities as well and don't want to associate it with acceptable conservative behavior. Maybe it's libertarian behavior?


5 posted on 12/30/2006 2:32:43 PM PST by gusopol3
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To: freespirited

The "Duke" case, and many like it (President Nixon) are all based on revenge and get the opposition. The Democrats will silence all opposition when they have the power. They do not have it yet. The real blame will be on the Republican voters that stay home rather than voting.


6 posted on 12/30/2006 2:35:09 PM PST by Blake#1
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To: freespirited

I love watching Repubs and Dems duke it out. Maybe one day y'all wipe each other off the face of the planet and let more sane, reasonable people take over.


7 posted on 12/30/2006 2:36:30 PM PST by TrollBridge
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To: Mount Athos

He ran in the "D" primary


8 posted on 12/30/2006 2:37:01 PM PST by sobieski
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To: gusopol3
The numerous posts about the behavior of the team the night of the party must be from people who are in their 70s or more. People in their 60s were part of the flower children who were so drugged out in college it's a miracle they have any brain cells left.
So kids party on campuses these days. *yawn* So did I, and my husband and my boys who are in college. Big deal.
You might recall that Reade Seligman took a cab back to his dorm. I asked my son if that was unusual and he said they always take cabs or have a DD. This generation (at least the bright ones) knows not to drive drunk.
9 posted on 12/30/2006 2:37:45 PM PST by luv2ski
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To: TrollBridge

We'll make sure to take out the third-party trolls first.


11 posted on 12/30/2006 2:45:14 PM PST by LS
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To: luv2ski
from people who are in their 70s or more.

well I'll be pushing my 70's in another couple decades, an amazingly short time, sigh. But this should be a cautionary to many young people who are "just along for the ride," when this kind of stuff gets talked about or started.

12 posted on 12/30/2006 2:46:10 PM PST by gusopol3
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To: HarmlessLovableFuzzball

When will the media stop calling this the "Duke Lacrosse Rape" case and start appropriately calling it the "Michael Nifong Case"?


13 posted on 12/30/2006 2:52:48 PM PST by beans36 (It's beginning to look a lot like Fitzmas)
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To: beans36

Dream on. I believe the correct term is Nifongate.


14 posted on 12/30/2006 2:57:23 PM PST by HarmlessLovableFuzzball
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To: beans36

"Mike Nifong's re-election as a 'rat" case.


15 posted on 12/30/2006 3:01:11 PM PST by Paladin2 (Islam is the religion of violins, NOT peas.)
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To: LS
We'll make sure to take out the third-party trolls first.

I'll have you know that I am a member of the 4th party thank-you-very-much.

16 posted on 12/30/2006 3:25:58 PM PST by TrollBridge
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To: freespirited
"By remaining silent about this obvious miscarriage of justice, black leadership looks as racist and cowardly as it paints white people who ignore obvious mistreatment of blacks.

Worth saying again. But of course, that's not what is happening. Instead, the actions of the black leadership serve to increase racial tension and friction.

Nothing new there.

17 posted on 12/30/2006 3:37:26 PM PST by FreedomPoster (Guns themselves are fairly robust; their chief enemies are rust and politicians) (NRA)
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To: sobieski; Mount Athos; Howlin; abb; Locomotive Breath

>>>>If Nifong didn't run with a (D) next to his name on the ballot, and wasn't appointed by one, then I don't think of it as a "Democrat scandal". But it's interesting that he is a Democrat.

>>He ran in the "D" primary

And in the general election, I believe with a "D" next to his name. In a town where the primary pretty much is the election, though I think he almost got nailed by a write-in, in the general election.

Pinging some locals for clarification.


18 posted on 12/30/2006 3:41:16 PM PST by FreedomPoster (Guns themselves are fairly robust; their chief enemies are rust and politicians) (NRA)
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To: FreedomPoster

It would be interesting to see all of those who came to Durham, North Carolina and jumped on the Nifong band wagon in the early days of the prosecution. I would love to see their quotes at the time. Al Sharpton and others come to mind.


19 posted on 12/30/2006 3:44:41 PM PST by Parley Baer
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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