Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Quest to convict hid a lack of evidence (The Fong's Obituary)
News and Observer ^ | April 14, 2007 | Joe Neff

Posted on 04/14/2007 2:49:16 AM PDT by abb

Quest to convict hid a lack of evidence The district attorney moved quickly to take over the lacrosse inquiry. An N&O review shows that once he accepted the accuser's story, little else mattered

Joseph Neff, Staff Writer DURHAM - Mike Nifong found out about the case that now threatens his career March 23, 2006, when he stopped by the office copier and found a court order demanding DNA samples from 46 Duke lacrosse players. An escort service dancer told police that three men at a team party had dragged her into a bathroom and raped her anally, vaginally and orally for 30 minutes, according to the order. The Durham district attorney's reaction, he later told lawyer Jim Cooney: "Holy crap, what is going on?"

The next day, Nifong told Durham police he was taking over. At 9 a.m. March 24, a police captain told the senior investigator, Sgt. Mark Gottlieb, that "Nifong was going to be running and prosecuting this case. ... Go through Mr. Nifong for any directions as to how to conduct matters in this case."

It was an unusual move for a prosecutor, but there's no evidence that the police challenged him. The case, however, was already in trouble.

The 27-year-old complainant, Crystal Gail Mangum, couldn't identify her alleged attackers. She had given at least six conflicting accounts. And the first officer who encountered her didn't believe her story.

Nifong forged ahead in what became a single-minded quest to support the accuser's account, not a mission to discover the truth. His pursuit ended in January when the district attorney, facing charges from the State Bar, removed himself from the case.

The final collapse came Wednesday, when Attorney General Roy Cooper dropped all charges and declared Dave Evans, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann innocent.

A News & Observer examination of Nifong's handling of the case, based on documents and dozens of interviews, adds new insights about the investigation's focus on shoring up Mangum's claims. Nifong ignored contrary facts, withheld evidence favorable to the accused and refused to discuss the case with defense lawyers.

His lead investigator, Linwood Wilson, pressured witnesses and produced different timelines and accounts to support Mangum's shifting statements.

There is no evidence that Nifong or any investigator challenged Mangum to explain the contradictions in her versions of what happened at 610 N. Buchanan Blvd. Nor did they speak with the doctor who conducted the pelvic examination hours after Mangum said she had been raped.

Baffling those who knew him along with the millions of people around the world who came to know his name, Nifong stuck with Mangum's stories. As he fought to win the Democratic nomination for district attorney, he made a series of decisions and inflammatory statements that propelled the case into an international scandal. It turned three college students into criminal suspects and brought scorn on Durham, Duke and almost every other institution involved.

Nifong, who has made few public statements since last spring, declined to be interviewed for this report.

Not well known

In March of last year, few people outside the Durham courthouse had heard of Mike Nifong.

He was a career civil servant; prosecuting had been his only job since graduating from law school in 1978. A conscientious objector in the Vietnam War, he had boasted about a career of high ethics.

Nifong had a reputation as a sharp lawyer but was also known as abrasive, vindictive and prone to volcanic tantrums. He hadn't tried a serious felony case since 1999, when he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. A new district attorney, he had never dealt with the swarms of reporters who descend on a major story.

By the time Nifong took the documents off the copier March 23, Durham police were having trouble with the case.

Mangum, a mother of two, worked for several escort agencies and danced at a Hillsborough strip club. She said three men had pulled her into a small, tiled bathroom and assaulted her.

Sgt. John Shelton, the first officer who saw Mangum after the party, doubted her story. After talking with her in the Duke Hospital emergency room, he loudly announced, "I think she is lying."

Later, police showed Mangum photographs of 36 lacrosse players. She looked at more than three-quarters of the team but couldn't identify any players as her assailants.

If Mangum couldn't make an identification, forensic science could. Mangum said that her attackers did not wear condoms and that one and perhaps all three had ejaculated. A crime lab could identify attackers from the DNA in any semen, blood or hair left during a 30-minute attack.

On March 27, a Durham police investigator, Angela Ashby, drove to the State Bureau of Investigation laboratory in Raleigh and hand-delivered the DNA evidence, which can provide a direct, unchallenged link to a suspect. She handed over swabs that an emergency room doctor took from Mangum's body March 14, a few hours after the party.

Lab technicians would scrutinize the samples for semen, blood and saliva, and then see whether the DNA matched any of the swabs taken from the mouths of the 46 players. Nifong asked the lab to move the samples to the front of the line.

On the same day, Nifong started a media offensive. The News & Observer had broken the story of the team giving DNA samples and then published an interview with Mangum. Activists and neighborhood residents had responded with two protests outside the house where three lacrosse captains lived: a candlelight vigil and a raucous affair where protesters banged pots and held signs that read "Castrate" and "Get a Conscience, Not a Lawyer."

Nifong gave scores of interviews to television and newspaper reporters who called or showed up at his office. The coverage worried Bob Ekstrand, a Durham lawyer who represented dozens of team members. Ekstrand set up an appointment with Nifong on March 27.

The meeting started cordially. Ekstrand said he asked Nifong how he would make decisions. He urged the prosecutor not to do anything until the DNA test results came back.

Nifong ended the meeting abruptly. Ekstrand recalled Nifong's parting words: "If you've come here to ask me questions instead of telling me what you know about who did it, then we don't have anything to talk about. You're wasting my time. You tell all of your clients I will remember their lack of cooperation at sentencing. I hope you know if they didn't do it, they are all aiders and abettors, and that carries the same punishment as rape."

As he left, Ekstrand noticed several reporters milling in the hall outside Nifong's office.

A vacation surprise

Jackie Brown was at her vacation home on North Topsail Beach in late March when Nifong called, she said in an interview. Brown, a political insider who worked many election campaigns in Durham, had agreed to run his campaign.

Nifong told Brown he was going to be on the news, something with Duke lacrosse.

Brown was surprised: "I said, 'Hold it, do you have any idea what this could do to your campaign, good or bad?' He said no."

Brown told Nifong to keep quiet until they figured out how it would affect the election. She hung up the phone and turned on the television. As Brown channel surfed that evening, she saw her candidate on local news. She watched him on Fox News, her favorite network, and another national show. Brown tried calling Nifong on his cell phone and at his office, but he wasn't answering.

At dawn the next morning, Brown and her miniature dachshund, Daffany, headed back to Durham. She wanted to talk with her candidate.

This campaign had been unusual from the start. In April 2005, Nifong had been appointed by Gov. Mike Easley to fill Jim Hardin's unexpired term. Easley has said Nifong promised not to run for election. But he did, and he had strong opposition from former Assistant District Attorney Freda Black in the May primary.

When Nifong called Brown in the fall of 2005, looking for a campaign manager, Brown had never heard of the prosecutor. This was unusual for an insider who's well-connected with Durham's political organizations.

Brown agreed to meet him for lunch Jan. 2, 2006, at the downtown Marriott near the courthouse. Nifong showed up with his wife, Cy Gurney. As the women ate Caesar salads and Nifong tended to a steak sandwich, Gurney did most of the talking. Brown was struck by the first words out of Nifong's mouth.

"He said, 'I really don't want this job; I was the last one on the list. I just need three years and seven months for retirement. You won't have to worry about running another campaign for me.' "

Brown was taken aback: Did Nifong, then 55, really want to go through the hassle of a campaign? "He said, 'I know nothing about politics. That's why I need you to be campaign manager.' "

Four more years would make a big difference for Nifong's retirement. If he served five years as a district attorney, his 29 years as a regular state employee would apply to the more lucrative retirement plan for a district attorney; overnight, in April 2010, his annual pension would increase by at least $15,000 a year.

Brown signed on, with no idea that the political neophyte would become one of the nation's most famous prosecutors.

Grist for media mill

When Brown drove back from the beach, she found satellite trucks crowding the courthouse parking lot. Reporters and camera crews roamed the sixth-floor hallway outside Nifong's office, looking for an interview.

Nifong obliged, declaring that the rape was racially motivated. He ripped into the lacrosse players in an interview with The N&O: "I would like to think that somebody who was not in the bathroom has the human decency to call up and say, 'What am I doing covering up for a bunch of hooligans?' "

Seeing the crowd, Brown retreated to a corner and called Nifong several times on his cell phone, she said. No answer.

When Nifong left his office to go to the men's room, Brown maneuvered him into a corner so her back was to the cameras.

"What are you doing? Why don't you answer my calls?"

The television reporters had asked that he turn off the cell phone so it wouldn't ring during interviews, Nifong said.

"I said, 'You don't have any idea what the impact is going to be on your campaign.' He said, 'I'm getting a million dollars of free advertisements.'

"I left and didn't say another word."

Staff writer Joseph Neff can be reached at 829-4516 or joseph.neff@newsobserver.com.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: duke; dukelax; durham; nifong
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 141-149 next last
First of a five-part series
1 posted on 04/14/2007 2:49:23 AM PDT by abb
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: abb

THE SERIES
CHAPTER ONE

The unpredictable DA makes unusual decisions.

CHAPTER TWO

Sunday: Nifong believes the accuser’s story. But has he really heard it?

CHAPTER THREE

Monday: The pursuit of DNA yields clues never pursued.

CHAPTER FOUR

Tuesday: An unsung lawyer cracks the code.

CHAPTER FIVE

Wednesday: An overlooked witness reveals new evidence.


2 posted on 04/14/2007 2:50:33 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: abner; Alia; AmishDude; AntiGuv; beyondashadow; Bitter Bierce; bjc; Bogeygolfer; BossLady; ...

Ping


3 posted on 04/14/2007 2:51:29 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: abb

Again, many, many editorials and articles this morning.

Link to roundup:

http://z9.invisionfree.com/LieStoppers_Board/index.php?showtopic=3054


4 posted on 04/14/2007 2:52:42 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: abb

Brad Bannon and Jim Cooney - two of the defense legal team - posted last night on the LieStoppers board. Link to their comments here:

http://z9.invisionfree.com/LieStoppers_Board/index.php?showtopic=3047


5 posted on 04/14/2007 2:56:22 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: abb
"in April 2010, his annual pension would increase by at least $15,000 a year."

Ya made a bad investment Mikey.

6 posted on 04/14/2007 4:02:00 AM PDT by Enterprise (I can't talk about liberals anymore because some of the words will get me sent to rehab.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enterprise

Money ain’t worth much when you’re in jail, lol...


7 posted on 04/14/2007 4:03:35 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: abb
"A conscientious objector during the Vietnam War........"

How can one be a conscientious objector if one has no conscience?

Leni

8 posted on 04/14/2007 4:13:28 AM PDT by MinuteGal (The Left takes power only through deception.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: abb

One of the posters in the link advanced a theory that I had floated several months ago. I had suggested that the defense investigators probably had figured out the movements of Precious and reasonably knew that she had to have DNA on her. When the report came back negative the flag went up, and the defense knew something was wrong.


9 posted on 04/14/2007 4:13:58 AM PDT by Enterprise (I can't talk about liberals anymore because some of the words will get me sent to rehab.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Enterprise

Go to the Liestoppers board and read Brad Bannon and Jim Cooney’s comments on this issue.

http://z9.invisionfree.com/LieStoppers_Board/index.php?showtopic=3047&st=0


10 posted on 04/14/2007 4:16:22 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: abb
Activists and neighborhood residents had responded with two protests outside the house where three lacrosse captains lived: a candlelight vigil and a raucous affair where protesters banged pots and held signs that read "Castrate" and "Get a Conscience, Not a Lawyer."

I can just bet not a single one of those thugs has apologized. 'Castrate'? Sounds awfully close to advocating lynching or murder. Sue those bastards too.

11 posted on 04/14/2007 4:19:03 AM PDT by 6SJ7
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: abb

While you are absolutely right, look at it this way. If he goes to jail, he gets 3 hots and a cot; additionally, he receives free medical treatment for as long as he is in da joint. Sooooo, he spends a few years (hopefully) in jail, saves his investment income, gets his pension and lives out his remaining shameful days.


12 posted on 04/14/2007 4:21:39 AM PDT by MarkT
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: abb

He said, ‘I’m getting a million dollars of free advertisements.’

Bastard!


13 posted on 04/14/2007 4:24:41 AM PDT by maggief
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: abb
"Was there a "mole" who tipped off the defense about the DNA and other aspects of this case? It will be interesting to learn if there was a "Deep Throat" in the case-- either from the Durham PD or the prosecutor's office."

Naw - they were reading FreeRepublic.

14 posted on 04/14/2007 4:25:43 AM PDT by Enterprise (I can't talk about liberals anymore because some of the words will get me sent to rehab.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: abb

I have worked for people who would sell their mother’s for the next promotion. It aint pretty.

After I retired , a Chief who had retired also ,asked me in conversation one day,” How come the troops never liked me?”

How could I tell him that they never trusted him. That they knew he would sell them out. How could he forget the time he sold me out and ask such a question?

People like Nifong are like horses with blinders on, they only see that next promotion in front of them, their peripheral vison of those they are stepping on is cut off by the blinders of ambition.

Its funny when I go to reunions, I am met and greeted and have many friends, This fellow and those like him are not welcome and mostly dont go. Oh well: He gets a lot more in his pension check than I do, maybe that is compansation.
But I never sold out a friend,or anyone else, and I never kissed anyone’s ass.


15 posted on 04/14/2007 4:29:05 AM PDT by sgtbono2002 (I will forgive Jane Fonda, when the Jews forgive Hitler.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: 6SJ7

Sue them? Not hardly!

I would bring in a Federal task force and have it camp out in Durham for the next two or three years.
They would be headed up by a special prosecutor. Their charge - investigate, document, and then prosecute all hate crimes associated with this case.

If the “average” person of color can be instantly terrorized by a “representation of slavery”; a.k.a. the Confederate Flag and get “protection“ under the law; then the innocent students who had to endure the mobs outside their legal place of residence must be afforded the same protection. You also add the speeches made by the “88” and other members of the Duke facility - persons who made use of their position in the community without any actual knowledge of the facts.

Odds of this happening? NONE.

Proof of statement - Imus and the Rappers.


16 posted on 04/14/2007 4:45:55 AM PDT by Nip (SPECTRE - taking out the enemy one terrorist at a time; at night; without warning or mercy)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: abb
It's going to be extremely enjoyable to watch this Nifong pr*** spend the next couple of decades fighting all the civil lawsuits against him.

By the time he gets done paying defense attorneys and civil judgements he's going to be dead broke.

Hopefully he'll have plenty of time to help his attorneys as he'll be in prison with nothing better to do.

What worries me is that this clown really isn't all that much of an aberration. Prosecutors have enormous power and can pretty much ruin anyone who doesn't have access to million dollar defense lawyers.

L

17 posted on 04/14/2007 4:47:24 AM PDT by Lurker (Comparing 'moderate' islam to 'extremist' islam is like comparing small pox to plague.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: abb; Howlin
All of these gangsters wanted money. Incredible.

"I just need three years and seven months for retirement."(to increase his pension by $15,000)
DA Mike NiFong

"How can I best spin this to my advantage?"
Kim Roberts

"I'm gonna get paid by the white boys."
Crystal Gale Magnum

18 posted on 04/14/2007 4:47:44 AM PDT by SkyPilot
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: abb

Nifong, Imus, racial gang warfare in LA, the liberal utopia is unravelling this morning.


19 posted on 04/14/2007 4:58:42 AM PDT by sergeantdave (Ice-cubes melting in the sun is an act of God. Get over it, Gore.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: abb

Got the hugest smile on my face reading their comments, abb.


20 posted on 04/14/2007 5:23:50 AM PDT by Alia
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 141-149 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson