Everything about Responses To The 2006 Duke University Lacrosse Case totally explained
The
2006 Duke University lacrosse case resulted in a great deal of coverage in the media and a widespread community response at Duke and in the
Durham, North Carolina area.
Media coverage
Initial coverage (March-April 2006)
The case attracted widespread media attention almost from the moment it became public. The apparent circumstances—three white males from privileged backgrounds at an elite university apparently taking advantage of a student and single mother from a crosstown black college, trying to make ends meet by working as a stripper—seemed tailor-made for wall-to-wall coverage. However, once the case detiorated, critics saw it as a stinging showcase of bias in the media and the university system.
Among those giving extensive coverage to the matter was
Nancy Grace. Prior to Duke suspending its men's lacrosse team's season, she sarcastically noted on the air, "I'm so glad they didn't miss a lacrosse game over a little thing like gang rape!" and "Why would you go to a cop in an alleged gang rape case, say, and lie and give misleading information?"
Other outlets that took inital pro-prosecution slants included, but are not limited to:
The case continues (May-October 2006)
Grace continued to feature developments in the case on her program, with a pro-prosecution slant. On June 9, 2006, after hearing reporting on various defense motions, which the CNN reporter indicated might already prove reasonable doubt, Grace sarcastically asked, "Well I'm glad you've already decided the outcome of the case, based on all of the defense filings. Why don't we just all move to Nazi Germany, where we don't have a justice system and a jury of one's peers?" On June 22, 2006, she featured
Sports Illustrated writer
Lester Munson who opined, "I think the state has probably a better case than most observers are describing. I've studied this at some length ... There is some voracity (sic) to the victim's account."
On
August 6,
2006,
The News & Observer of Raleigh, NC, wrote that District Attorney
Mike Nifong "promised DNA evidence that hasn't materialized. He suggested that police conduct lineups in a way that conflicted with department policy." The article went on to say that "he made a series of factual assertions that contradicted his own files: He suggested the players used condoms; he accused the players of erecting a wall of silence to thwart investigators; and he said the woman had been hit, kicked and strangled. The medical and police records show that the victim had said no condom was used, that police had interviewed three players at length and taken their DNA samples and that the accuser showed no significant bruises or injuries."
On
August 25,
2006, amid growing doubts as to the strength of the case and the veracity of Mangum,
The New York Times published a front page article by Duff Wilson and Jonathan Glater stating that the weaknesses in the case highlighted by the defense were not indicative of the strength of the case as a whole. "In several important areas, the full files, reviewed by
The New York Times, contain evidence stronger than that highlighted by the defense." The
Times story further indicated that "there is also a body of evidence to support (Nifong's) decision to take the matter to a jury." This article would be widely criticized as the actual lack of strength of Nifong's case became apparent. In spite of widespread criticism, the newspaper's Public Editor defended Wilson, and he was permitted to remain on the case through Nifong's disbarment trial.
The case deteriorates (November 2006-May 2007)
After many inflammatory comments about the defendants, Nancy Grace's show covered the dismissal of charges on the day of the announcement, but with a substitute host.
Perhaps the most grudging admission of exoneration came from
The Boston Globe, which stated in a lead editorial: "Three members of the Duke lacrosse team may have been louts, but all the evidence suggests they were not rapists . . . the students have the resources to get on with their lives."
Similarly grudging was sportswriter
John Feinstein, who stated on the Jim Rome Show, aka the Jungle, (a international syndicated sports talk show) in May 2007 "I think they're guilty of everything but rape" and "I really don’t want to hear that they’re victims and martyrs, and that their lives have been ruined." Feinstein, who in March 2006 had demanded the revocation of the scholarships of every Duke men's lacrosse team member, and who (against the findings of the Coleman report) continued to describe the team as "out-of-control", added "I don't think I've been proven wrong."
While the march of the 2007 Duke men's team to the NCAA final game generally received extensive and favorable coverage, a number of sportswriters published negative stories about the team.
Washington Post columnist
Mike Wise wrote "(I)t's hard to embrace everyone as a victim. With all due respect to those 'INNOCENT' bracelets worn around Durham this year, this isn't "
To Kill a Mockingbird II."
Chicago Tribune columnist
Philip Hersh commented, "The idea that the Duke lacrosse team's success is a feel-good story makes me ill. . . it would be a bigger mistake to believe (the dropping of charges) means Duke's lacrosse team was innocent of assault against common decency.
"
After proclamations by the NC Attorney General that the three students were "innocent" in April, USA Today columnist and incoming Bennett College President
Dr. Julianne Malveaux commented in an interview on National Public Radio a few days later that they were "hooligans", had lied, and that they "did not deserve an apology."
The
Duke Chronicle noted the closing of the case, and stated. "There are other members of the Duke community, however, from whom we've not heard . . . These are the voices of the range of individuals, from students to professors to community members, who responded to last year's allegations not with moderation . . . but with extreme, inflammatory and unfounded statements. . . "
Response
Duke faculty groups
Soon after the allegations were made, 88 Duke professors (commonly referred to as the "Group of 88") from the
Trinity College of Arts & Sciences placed an ad in
The Chronicle referring to the circumstances surrounding the allegations as a "social disaster" and quoting anonymous individuals citing racism and sexism in the Duke community. The advertisement concluded, "We're turning up the volume ... To the students speaking individually and to the protestors making collective noise, thank you for not waiting and for making yourselves heard.". Notable signatories included:
Anne Allison,
Ariel Dorfman,
Michael Hardt,
Alice Kaplan,
Claudia Koonz,
Walter Mignolo,
Mark Anthony Neal and
Alex Rosenberg.
In three departments, more than half of faculty signed the statement. The department with the highest proportion of signatories was
African &
African-American Studies, with 80%. Just over 72% of the
Women's Studies faculty signed the statement,
Cultural Anthropology 60%,
Romance studies 44.8%,
Literature 41.7%,
English 32.2%,
Art &
Art History 30.7%, and
History 25%. No faculty members from the
Pratt School of Engineering or full-time
law professors signed the document. Departments that had no faculty members sign the document include
Biological Anthropology and
Anatomy,
Biology,
Chemistry,
Computer Science,
Economics,
Genetics,
Germanic Languages/Literature,
Psychology and
Neuroscience,
Religion, and
Slavic and
Eurasian Studies. Many have criticized the group for rushing to judgment in condemning the lacrosse players.
In January 2007, a new letter was posted at the Concerned Duke Faculty website signed by 87 faculty members stating that the original ad was misinterpreted. In the letter, the group doesn't apologize for the original ad but instead states that the intent of the ad was to address issues of racism and sexism on the Duke campus and not prejudge the case.
The missing professor from the original
Group of 88, math professor Arlie Petters, remains the only member who has publicly expressed regret about the statement’s impact. Petters said in regard to the Listening Statement: “Whenever something causes undue pain to people, then of course that isn’t something I'd want to be a part of.”
Seventeen faculty members of the
economics department sent a letter showing support for the players on
January 6,
2007, saying, "We regret that the Duke faculty is now seen as prejudiced against certain of its own students," and telling the players that they're more than welcome to enroll in their courses.
Student groups and independent organizations
Contrasting certain groups who had prejudged the players as guilty, many students have shown their support for the lacrosse team in a variety of ways. The Duke women's lacrosse team chose to wear "Innocent" sweatbands with the accused players' numbers during their games in the 2006 NCAA Final Four. "We want to win a national championship for ourselves but definitely also for the university and the men's team," one team member explained. "They don't really have a chance to play their season, which is a shame." The women came under fire from many in the media. Kevin Sweeney of
Salon argued that their actions will make it more difficult for rape victims to speak out in the future, while
New York Times sports columnist Harvey Araton stated that their "cross-team friendship" made them lose common sense.
Another group of students, Duke Students for an Ethical Durham, sought to encourage students to vote in the upcoming election as Durham residents. It was specifically created in response to Nifong's mishandling of the case.
The Association for Truth and Fairness (ATAF) seeks to raise money to defray some of the indicted players' legal fees. ATAF, a non-profit organization, will continue to "help victims of abuses of power and other prosecutorial injustices."
Wristbands saying "Duke Lacrosse 2006 INNOCENT! #6 #13 #45" were also sold to raise money for the cause.
An outpouring of support came at the beginning of the 2007 lacrosse season. For the season opener, 6,485 fans attended the game to cheer the Blue Devils on their way to a 17-11 victory.
North Carolina Central University forum
The day after DNA results came back negative, Nifong and other city officials such as Durham Mayor
Bill Bell spoke at a community forum on
April 12,
2006, on violence against women at
N.C. Central, where the accuser was a student. The crowd, predominantly African American, criticized the media for portraying the accuser as a stripper and escort instead of a mother and student. One questioner said that Duke University hospital must have tampered with the DNA sample for it to come back negative, while another suggested that the accuser ought to have been helicoptered to
Wake med for treatment since Duke had a conflict of interest. One NCCU student, as quoted by
Newsweek, stated, "It's the same old story. Duke up, Central down." He continued that he wanted to see the Duke students prosecuted "whether it happened or not. It would be justice for things that happened in the past." NCCU
Chancellor James H. Ammons Jr. said that "[t]his incident has forced us to examine issues relevant to any campus environment -- sexism, racism and the need to educate our students about sexual assault and violence against women." At the same time, he urged the crowd to be patient and let the legal process take its course.
Other Faculty
Criticism of the Group of 88 has been leveled by faculty at other institutions as well. On August 3, 2007, Joseph W. Bellacosa, former dean and a professor of law at St. John's University School of Law and a former judge of the New York State Court of Appeals, wrote in
Newsday an article entitled, "Duke faculty should be shunned by students." In it, he says:
The 88 are thus granted a kind of institutional immunity, a corruption of process all by itself because it sidesteps a day of public reckoning. But although the group can't technically be charged with crimes - though abandoning your young and endangering youth sure do come close to real definable crimes - there are ways these professors can be held accountable. The identities of the 88 professors should be posted in significant ways and places, including in the media and on the Internet, so that they may be known for what they've done.
The likely howls of protest from the tenure police, university guild apologists and free-speech absolutists notwithstanding, the professoriat shouldn't be shielded from appropriate public condemnation for their misconduct. Their dormant consciences and sensibilities should be reawakened to the abhorrent nature of the actions they inflicted on their own students.
NAACP and civil rights activists
The
NAACP urged for a thorough investigation of the facts and a trial with a jury before the public formed an opinion on the case. North Carolina NAACP Legal Redress Chair, Al McSurely, explained that "The NAACP stands for fair play for all parties, zealous investigation and deep concern for the survivors of racist/sexist attacks." At the same time, some have criticized the NAACP for making statements that portrayed the players as racist despite evidence to the contrary, using the case to promote the group's cause, and implying guilt. McSurely stated that "[w]ithin five minutes, the men threatened the women with racial and misogynist verbal assaults," despite evidence to the contrary. He continued that the lacrosse players "were caught with their macho entitlement views hanging out and, to save themselves, they've banned together to blame the survivor of their verbal assaults."
After Nifong dropped the rape charges against the three players in December 2006, the NAACP's "case monitor" and
NCCU law professor Irving Joyner stated that the drop of rape charges could help Nifong's case: "Now, they don’t have to establish that there was penetration committed against the accuser . . . In addition to that, now they don’t have to deal with the DNA or the lack of DNA evidence. And with the rape shield statute, it’s unlikely that information will even come before the jury to consider."
On the official state NAACP's website, an 82 point 'Crimes and Torts committed by Duke Lacrosse Team Players' memo was listed long after the charges were dropped and the players were declared innocent. Included in the memorandum was an assessment of the defendants' strategy to have the charges dropped: "The three defendants they've two mountains to climb. First, they must deflect public attention from their boorish, racist, and illegal behavior by mounting outlandish attacks on the survivor and the D.A. Second, they must deal with a mountain of physical evidence, that's corroborated by, we've reason to believe, accounts of some of the men who were at the party who have cooperated with the police and the D.A. from early on." North Carolina Attorney General
Roy A. Cooper refuted these facts in the summary of findings report. It stated that "no evidence ... corroborate[d] the accusing witness's versions of the events ... No DNA evidence confirmed her stories ... No medical evidence confirmed her stories ... No other witness confirmed her stories ... The accusing witness’s accounts of the story changed significantly."
In April 2006, civil rights activist
Al Sharpton was invited on Fox's
The O'Reilly Factor to discuss the case. Sharpton began the interview by commending the "blacks and whites who stood vigil and to come together in that community to stand up for this girl." In response to Bill O'Reilly's questions concerning the possibility that the woman might have fabricated the allegations, Sharpton said, "First of all, the authorities have charged there was a crime. ... When the prosecutors went forward, they clearly have said this girl is the victim, so why would we be trying the victim?" When O'Reilly mentioned recent news reports that DNA testing had failed to match any of the defendants, Sharpton said, "I think that all of the facts that you've laid out the DA had — and I know this DA is probably not one that's crazy. He wouldn't have proceeded if he didn't feel that he could convict." Sharpton continued that the case parallels "
Abner Louima, who was raped and sodomized in a bathroom." At the conclusion of the interview, when O'Reilly said that Sharpton didn't know what happened, Sharpton agreed. "I don't know yet and I think that the proper thing to do is to support those that want justice."
On
April 15,
2006, civil rights activist
Jesse Jackson said that his non-profit
Rainbow/Push Coalition organization would pay for the college tuition of the accuser, Mangum, whether she fabricated the story or not. Jackson said that she should never "have to stoop that low to survive." He continued that the "...fantasy's as old as slave masters impregnating young slave girls [...] The character of this thing is chilling [and] [s]omething happened that everybody's ashamed of..." Defense attorney Joe Cheshire found Jackson's comment about "slave masters" odd because the players didn't ask for black strippers. "There is no slave-master mentality here, and that's just another perfect example of [...] self-absorbed race pandering," Cheshire stated.
Bloggers
The case received extensive coverage on
blogs. Perhaps the most notable blog which supported the three students was
Durham-in-Wonderland
authored by
Brooklyn College history professor
K.C. Johnson, which specialized in thorough coverage and exhaustive analysis of the case. The players' lawyers stated that they used it as a resource throughout the case, and Seligmann made a point of thanking Johnson in his statement following the dismissal of charges.
"Wanted poster" distribution
A poster that "looked like a
wanted poster" was distributed on campus and in nearby neighborhoods showing pictures and names of 40 members of the lacrosse team, urging them to "come forward" with information on the alleged rape.
Duke administration and University president
The university placed Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty on interim suspension for the Spring 2006 semester following their indictment, while David Evans graduated the day before he was indicted. Duke University policy calls for suspensions when students face felony charges. In the fall of 2006, their status was modified to "administrative leave" to allow them to make academic progress while not at the university.
Richard H. Brodhead, president of Duke University, was quoted by
WRAL as saying to the Durham Chamber of Commerce on
April 20,
2006, "If our students did what is alleged, it's appalling to the worst degree. If they didn’t do it, whatever they did is bad enough." At the same time, Brodhead has repeatedly stated that "our students must be presumed innocent until proven otherwise," with his earliest citation on
March 25,
2006.
On
December 20,
2006, Brodhead stated that "the DA's case will be on trial just as much as our students will be." Two days later, Nifong dropped the most serious rape charges against the players. Brodhead released a statement calling for Nifong to recuse himself and questioned his actions: "Given the certainty with which the district attorney made his many public statements regarding the rape allegation, his decision today to drop that charge must call into question the validity of the remaining charges. The district attorney should now put this case in the hands of an independent party who can restore confidence in the fairness of the process. Further, Mr. Nifong has an obligation to explain to all of us his conduct in this matter."
On
January 3,
2007, Brodhead invited Seligmann and Finnerty back to Duke as students in good standing. They were also welcomed to participate on the lacrosse team. Brodhead explained, "We have decided that the right and fair thing to do is to welcome back Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty to resume their studies at Duke for the spring semester. Although the students still face serious charges and larger issues require Duke’s collective attention, the circumstances in this case have changed substantially, and it's appropriate that the students have an opportunity to continue their education." After the charges were dropped, Seligmann decided to enroll at
Brown University, while Finnerty chose to attend
Loyola College in Maryland.
Brodhead, in an interview with
Lesley Stahl of
60 Minutes, stated that "Duke has a rule and many, many, many other universities observe the same rule, which is that when a student is indicted for a crime that has an element of violence, we often separate the student from the university because you don't know at that time what harm [...] might be done either in the community or to the student. It isn’t a judgment of guilt. It isn't a disciplinary measure. And what we've done is to use the interim to try to understand the nature of the case better. Weighing a lot of things [...] the presumption of innocence, the nature of the charges, the need of the students to get on with their life. Once the facts took the turn they did in December, then we'd to rebalance those things. Then at that point it just seemed to us that simple fairness meant that we'd to allow the students to come back."
In regards to the team's season, Duke athletic director Joe Alleva decided to forfeit two games due to admitted behaviors such as "underage drinking and hiring private party dancers". According to Brodhead, the team's players then "wished to suspend competitive play until the DNA results come back." Brodhead then decided to suspend the remainder of the season until "there [was] a clearer resolution of the legal situation."
In an open letter to the public, Brodhead outlined his formation of committees to examine the lacrosse team, the administration's response to the incident, the student judicial process, campus culture, and a presidential council. The committee has been criticized by observers, including
K.C. Johnson, since members included
Group of 88 members such as
Anne Allison.
After Nifong's resignation and disbarment, Brodhead released a statement: "One fact stares us in the face: The ordeal of the last 15 months was wholly unnecessary. It wasn't the result of reasonable differences of legal opinion or honest errors of judgment. Our students were accused by the community's senior law enforcement officer with no credible basis in fact [...] The actions Duke took caused consternation to many in the University family, which I profoundly regret. As Duke University's president, I resolve to do my part to repair the harm unleashed by Mr. Nifong's actions and to move forward from this painful episode."
Later, Brodhead apologized to the lacrosse players and their families for the university's "failure to reach out" in a "time of extraordinary peril." Brodhead's actions also generated some criticism from opinion pieces in the media. For example,
Newsweek published an article on
September 10,
2007 that argued that "Brodhead and Nifong [theDA in the case] had an almost willful disregard for the facts." An article in
The Economist on
September 15,
2007, stated that Brodhead did "little, if anything, to defend the lacrosse players or to criticise the faculty [atDuke] for its lynching mob mentality." Stuart Taylor Jr. and K. C. Johnson argue President Broadhead and other administrators "portray[ed] them [thestudents] with grotesque exaggeration as a bunch of uncooperative, rowdy, drunken white racists who might well be rapists, too. Nifong, hoping to divert attention from the powerful proof of innocence in the soon-to-be-public DNA tests (that exculpated the students), could hardly have hoped for a more obliging helper than Richard Brodhead."
Other Duke faculty
Duke English Professor
Houston Baker (now former professor as he was hired as a Distinguished University Professor at
Vanderbilt University in May 2006) wrote a scathing letter on
March 29,
2006, regarding the lacrosse team and the administration's response to the incident, asking, "[w]hat have Duke and its leadership done to address this horrific, racist incident alleged to have occurred" and asserting "internationally, we've been deeply embarrassed by the silence that seems to surround this white, male athletic team's racist assaults (by words, certainly - deeds, possibly) in our community".
Baker, a Black individual, also wrote that the players were "safe under the cover of silent whiteness" and these "[y]oung, white, violent, drunken men among us - [are] implicitly boasted [sic] by our athletic directors and administrators." He said Duke has joined other colleges and universities in the "blind-eying of male athletes, veritably given license to rape, maraud, deploy hate speech, and feel proud of themselves in the bargain." He also explicitly stated that the lacrosse players displayed "abhorrent sexual assault, verbal racial violence, and drunken white male privilege loosed amongst us."
Duke University Provost Peter Lange wrote a response in which he said, "I can't tell you how disappointed, saddened and appalled I was to receive this letter from you." The Provost stated that, "A form of prejudice - one felt so often by minorities whether they be African American, Jewish or other - is the act of prejudgment: to presume that one knows something 'must' have been done by or done to someone because of his or her race, religion or other characteristic." He continued, "We don't know much about the worst of what may have happened in the incident that has inflamed our community," and concluded, "Sadly, letters like yours do little to advance our common cause."
Full version of both letters
Brodhead appointed Duke Law Professor, James E. Coleman, Jr., to head the committee to examine the lacrosse team's culture. Dr. Coleman, also a Black individual, found that the team has exhibited "exemplary academic and athletic performance" and is "[n]either racist or sexist. On the contrary, the coach of the Duke Women's Lacrosse team has expressed her sense of camaraderie that exists between the men's and women's team; members of the men's team, for example, consistently come to the women's games. The current as well as former Black members of the team have been extremely positive about the support the team provided them." Also in the report, while it was stated that the rates of alcohol abuse for the lacrosse team were higher than most other Duke athletic teams, "their conduct hasn't been different in character than the conduct of the typical Duke student who abuses alcohol." Furthermore, Coleman stated that Nifong has committed serious prosecutorial misconduct, and if there was a conviction, there "would be a basis to have the conviction overturned based on his conduct."
Professor Steven Baldwin of the Chemistry Department was another of the few faculty members to make public statements about the case. In two letters to the Duke Chronicle ("What About Mike Pressler?" in April 2006 and "The Administration's Mismanagement of Lacrosse" in October of 2006), Dr. Baldwin strongly criticised the administration's handling of the case, especially with respect to Coach Mike Pressler.
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