Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Nation & World

Duke's Trial by Media

Why the seamy lacrosse scandal may be too hot to be true

By Liz Halloran
Posted 8/6/06
Page 2 of 2

"There seems to be an inability on the part of the press as a whole to wait and corroborate," says Mike Taibbi, an NBC News correspondent who wrote a book about his experience covering the 1987 kidnap and rape allegations by black teenager Tawana Brawley against six white law enforcement officers. His digging for WCBS-TV led to questions about Brawley's veracity; a grand jury eventually found her story not credible.

Duke lacrosse player David Evans talks to the press after being indicted.
SARA D. DAVIS--GETTY IMAGES

Corroboration, however, can sometimes take a back seat to giving the audience what it wants. Kevin Miller, host of a radio talk show on 680 WPTF in Raleigh, says the Duke story played out as "a perfect storm of race, culture, and class, and people just couldn't get enough of it." Miller has appeared frequently as a local expert on Nancy Grace's Headline News legal program.

The prosecutor. But simply bashing the media for selling an intriguing--if uncertain--narrative misses a significant variable of how the coverage unfolded: Durham District Attorney Mike Nifong's unequivocal public assertions that a rape occurred and that he had the evidence. Joseph Neff, a Raleigh News & Observer investigative reporter, wrote that the DA had called the players "hooligans" and gave more than 50 media interviews before he stopped responding to requests in early April. Nifong, facing a May 2 Democratic primary challenge, was "standing in front of the world saying we have these A, B, and C facts," Neff says. "It would be irresponsible for us not to report what the local district attorney is telling the community. That's our job."

It was during those watershed weeks in April and May that the narrative shifted perceptibly. Two rounds of DNA tests had come back negative, the past rape claim surfaced, and an internal Duke inquiry found that the lacrosse team--while frequently violating underage drinking laws and racking up more alcohol-related incidents than other Duke teams--had no in-class disciplinary problems and excelled academically.

Nifong went silent, and the players' defense lawyers then filled the vacuum; the media narrative seemed to become a different sort of morality play. Stories began to play up the accuser's inconsistent account and focus on reports that another stripper who had accompanied her--and initially called the rape allegations "a crock"--was soliciting a public relations firm to capitalize on her newfound fame. The lacrosse players were more frequently given a boys-will-be-boys pass by the press on their previous misdeeds; suddenly, they were no longer brutes spewing racial epithets but academically serious sons of regular folks like firefighters. New York Times columnist Peter Applebome, a Duke alumnus, wrote last month that Seligmann is everything one of his former teachers would want in a son. Fellow Duke alum Dan Abrams of MSNBC has also been seen as especially sympathetic to the lacrosse players.

Still, some aren't buying. Grace, a controversial victim's advocate with a nightly CNN show, dismisses the new story line. "These are guys partying at their house with strippers? And they're angels? I'm not buying that," Grace tells U.S.News. "But I've also made no bones about it: If [the alleged victim] has lied, she must be prosecuted for making a false report."

"Nifong better have a silver bullet," says Grace, who was roundly criticized for one episode on her show; she admonished a correspondent for reading lacrosse scores off a monitor when she asked for "stats." Not athletic stats, she told him, "I mean rape stats." The segment, Grace says, was intended to call on the carpet those more concerned about the lacrosse team than the alleged victim.

When students return, a new lacrosse coach will be on board, and the team's suspension will be history. Nifong, who won his primary, will be the front-runner in November's general election. (In his first press conference in months, he acknowledged that some of the criticism over his handling of the case was justified.) Student journalist Rotberg and Duke's new student body president, Elliott Wolf, will be back in school--a little older, a little wiser, a little warier. The way Wolf sees it, what happened last spring was not just about a potential crime. It was about people taking advantage. "It was about opportunism. The media for the story, Nifong wanting to get elected, and those raising the bloody flag of racism," he says. "We as students were caught in the middle."

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