Wednesday, May 02, 2007

The Levicy Exam

Perhaps the most frightening aspect of this case comes in the realization that a massive fraud—the indictment of three innocent people without, as the attorney general publicly declared, any probable cause to do so—required so few figures from law enforcement to execute.

Mike Nifong obviously was the critical player in the case. But he had help:

  • from a lab director willing not to report all DNA test results even though state law required him to do so;
  • from an office “investigator” who the AG’s report went out of its way to suggest was unprofessional;
  • from a police officer who constructed “straight-from-memory” notes that conveniently filled in then-apparent holes in the DA’s case.

And, finally, from a SANE nurse-in-training whose own story appeared to change every time Crystal Mangum’s did.

The conduct of Dr. Brian Meehan, Linwood Wilson, and Sgt. Mark Gottlieb has received considerable attention throughout the case. This and tomorrow’s post will examine the role played by SANE nurse-in-training Tara Levicy. (Levicy has subsequently received her SANE certification, but at the time of the March 14 exam she was still in training.)

If this case had gone to trial, Levicy would have been one of the state’s key witnesses—the only person willing to provide medical testimony to corroborate whatever story Mangum happened to tell on the stand.

Mangum’s Arrival at Duke

Crystal Mangum arrived at Duke University Medical Center just before 3.00am on March 14. None of the various doctors and nurses who examined her, it appears, considered credible her claims of sexual assault. Mangum was behaving in a hysterical fashion atypical of real rape victims; one doctor speculated that she might be a candidate for psychological commitment.

Hospital policy requires any woman who claims sexual assault to receive a SANE exam. According to a November 2004 policy statement, Duke’s hospital employed “14 Duke SANE nurses—enough so there is at least one on-site during all shifts.” Yet a SANE nurse does not appear to have been present when Mangum arrived, and she waited more than four hours for her SANE exam. There has been no clear explanation why Duke failed to provide a timely SANE exam for Mangum.

SANE nurse-in-training Levicy arrived for work at 6.45am the morning of March 14. Since Mangum still hadn’t been seen by a SANE nurse, the Charge Nurse asked Levicy to examine the patient. It remains unclear as to why Duke allowed a SANE nurse-in-training to perform this task without supervision from a certified SANE nurse.

Levicy’s Background

Tara Levicy received a B.A. in women’s studies, with a minor in outdoor education, from the University of Maine. While there, she produced and directed a showing of Eve Ensler’s Vagina Monologues, an event she recalled with fondness. After graduation, she worked as an outdoor rafting guide and an associate at Planned Parenthood in Maine. In late 2003, she went back to school at a 15-month program at the University of Southern Maine, which allows humanities majors to nursing degrees.*

Levicy joined the staff of Duke hospital as an emergency nurse in February 2005. In August 2005, she began work on her SANE certification. At the time that she examined Crystal Mangum, Levicy had less than eight months’ experience as a SANE, and scarcely a year’s experience as a nurse in any capacity.

Kathleen Eckelt is a SANE nurse with decades of experience, who trains SANE nurses in her home state. She noted, “It takes time to develop the ability to make snap decisions needed in emergency situations. It takes time to learn about things like the bio-mechanics of trauma and patterns of injury. It takes time and skill to recognize personality disorders and manipulative and attention seeking behaviors that some patients will exhibit.” Only experience can provide the learning for such matters.

Levicy’s Examination

On March 14, Levicy conducted a detailed interview of Mangum, which lasted more than an hour and became the basis for her report. In the interview, Mangum claimed that she last had intercourse one week before (a statement subsequent DNA tests would prove to be untrue). Mangum denied digital penetration or penetration by a foreign object (a statement she would later contradict). She said her assailants didn’t use condoms. She added that one of her assailants said he was getting married the following day.

As Levicy later admitted in a November conversation with defense attorney Doug Kingsbery, her report did not include a critical piece of information—Mangum’s claim that the “attack” occurred around 1.00am. Levicy did not explain why she omitted this information from her report.

This exclusion was of considerable significance. More than nine months after the alleged attack, Mangum would assert that she was certain the “attack” occurred at 11.40pm. This time frame would have required her to be chatting on the cellphone with her father as she was being dragged against her will back into the house; and also on the cellphone during her dance at the lacrosse house. Photos did not show Mangum talking on the cellphone during the dance--one reason why the attorney general's report dismissed Mangum's last-minute timeline change.

Following procedure, Levicy took photographs of the only “injuries” that she documented during the exam—non-bleeding scratches and bruises on Mangum’s knee and heel. Levicy had no way of knowing, of course, that one of the lacrosse players had photographed Mangum during the dance, which showed these very same “injuries” while Mangum was dancing—or before she claimed she was raped, beaten, kicked, and/or strangled.

While Levicy photographed no other “injuries,” her report described Mangum as in severe pain and demonstrating tenderness to the touch virtually everywhere on the patient’s body. As last week’s Attorney General’s report observed, no objective medical evidence (such as an elevated blood pressure rate or signs of sweating) confirmed Levicy’s diagnosis. Levicy instead cited Mangum’s facial expressions and verbal responses as evidence that the patient was in pain from a rape.

This wholly subjective evaluation proved particularly troubling given Levicy’s apparent biases. As she conceded in a November interview with defense attorneys, she had never seen a woman who had claimed sexual assault behave hysterically as Mangum did during the examination. Did this atypical behavior raise alarm bells? No. Levicy, it turns out, isn’t particularly discerning in evaluating the truthfulness of a sexual assault patient’s verbal claims. When asked whether she had ever received a sexual assault report from a patient that turned out to be false, she replied, “No, never.”

Levicy and Theresa Arico, director of the SANE program at Duke University Medical Center, declined two requests for comment for this post. The day after I contacted her, Levicy’s e-mail address and office phone number disappeared from the Duke website.

The Manly Examination

Because Levicy wasn’t certified as a SANE nurse, she had to find someone else to perform the pelvic examination and evidence collection from the patient’s body. Under normal Duke procedure, this exam would have been conducted by a fully certified SANE nurse. Instead, Levicy turned to a resident, Dr. Julie Manly. Since under normal Duke procedures, SANE nurses rather than residents did such exams, it turns out that Crystal Mangum was the only sexual assault patient treated by Manly during her stay at Duke hospital. (Manly had done a handful of rape exams at her previous hospital, in Idaho.)

As she recounted in a conversation with defense attorney Doug Kingsbery, Manly detected a whitish fluid in Mangum’s vagina that she assumed was semen. Several months later, as she learned more about the case and the results of DNA tests, she realized Mangum was probably suffering from a severe yeast infection. This condition, she further noted, could also explain the only “injury” that Manly’s examination discovered—“diffuse edema in the vaginal walls.”

Manly noted no injuries to the anal area. As a result, the sexual assault form co-signed by Manly and Levicy made no indication of such injuries.

During this portion of the exam, Levicy was simply observing. The SANE nurse-in-training noted that Mangum claimed to be in extraordinary pain when Manly inserted a speculum for the vaginal examination. This item, in her opinion, fortified her belief that the patient had suffered through a traumatic experience. In fact, as Kathleen Eckelt later commented, this behavior should have tipped off Levicy that Mangum was lying:

In my experience, that’s very unusual. Sure, I’ve had patients who were sore, but those were patients who had significant injuries such as redness, tears, and abrasions and their behavior was nothing like that. In those cases, I just used the smallest sized speculum and went very slow and careful. I can’t recall a single exam where I had that much difficulty.

The ability to discern when a patient is likely lying is one reason why most SANE programs—especially at well-regarded hospitals such as Duke’s—require examinations to be conducted by SANE nurses with considerable experience, rather than people who didn’t even have their SANE certificates and whose total nursing experience was less than two years.

Manly also swabbed the vaginal and rectal areas for DNA; in interviews with defense attorneys, she later expressed surprise that she saw no signs of bruising in the rectal area, given the attack that Mangum claimed occurred. No item, anywhere in the rape form, could be construed as even suggesting that Mangum experienced rectal trauma; and Levicy performed no rectal exam of her own, independent of Manly’s work.

Manly further stated that Mangum’s hysterical conduct was not consistent with that of other sexual assault victims that she had treated. Kethra, another longtime SANE nurse who frequently posts at Liestoppers, hypothesized that Mangum’s behavior “was in direct contradiction to the level of non-injury found. She put on a good show for the examiners, needless to say.”

In short, had a trial occurred, Manly would have been a devastating witness for Mike Nifong: the doctor who performed the medical portions of the exam would have said that alternative explanations existed for Mangum’s condition, and that Mangum’s behavior didn’t resemble that of actual victims of sexual assault.

Yet between March 14, 2006, when Manly concluded her exam, and January 12, 2007, when Nifong recused himself from the case, no one from the Durham Police Department or the district attorney’s office ever interviewed Manly.

Levicy, on the other hand, was a favorite of DPD and of Nifong. Tomorrow’s post will examine her interaction with Durham law enforcement.

*--clarified from original

232 comments:

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Anonymous said...

Don't forget the infamous email that the judge ruled could be made public that significantly inflamed public sentiment against the players.

It was weeks or months before the American Psycho explanation got any traction at all. And it is still used to justify the idea the players were hooligans and sexists.

Anonymous said...

6:15 - You're kidding right? LOL. On the off chance you aren't, it's all about the many experiences of women's vaginas. I don't really recommend it. It's kind of clever I guess but it's not very good. I liked The Body better.

AMac said...

Commenter DK --

Please note that your wife can get in touch with me at

amac-2007 at usa dot net

if she would like to have me post her critique of KC Johnson's evaluation of SANE trainee Levicy's actions.

(See 1:24am, 9:17am, and 9:53am comments on this thread.)

AMac

Anonymous said...

Hi AMac,

My wife and I greatly appreciate your offer to post her critique of Mr. Johnson's evaluation of Ms. Levicy. She has already sketched out a rough draft but she is waiting for Mr. Johnson's 2nd part on Ms. Levicy.

Also, once the critque is complete, my wife would like to run it by one of her mentors, who is an author and speaker in the SANE nursing world, to see it she is willing to comment directly or indirectly.

Thank you again :)

DK

M. Simon said...

amac,

I'm not going to look up the page but when the false reporting of rape was a hot topic here I came up with stats in the 25% to 60% range with the most common number being around 40% to 50%. A 50% (aproximate) number was reported by a female NYC prosecutor.

So 25% would be a floor. Your 6% to 12% number is way off the mark.

The best study to date came up with a 40% number of self reported false accusations. So the actual number may be higher.

When Levicy says she had no experience with false claims she either had treated very few cases (less than 10 - the odds of a false claim in that number of exams is around 99.9% if the false rate is 50% or 99.4% if the false accusation rate was 40% , heck if the false rate was 25% the odds of seing a false claim of rape in 10 exams is 94%) or she was driven by her feminist agenda.

If she saw 20 cases and the false rate was 25% there is a 99.7% chance that she saw at least one false accusation.

How many cases does a trainee in SANE have to see to get certified?



Levicy is in big trouble.

Anonymous said...

As I stated on LS, Ms. Levicy's assertions regarding the "injuries," which sounded quite serious in the MSM, kept me on board with the hoax for longer than I would like to admit and are probably Mr. Nifong's best defense to criminal charges.

The ethics standards for nurses that make sense from a legal perspective have to require that the SANE nurse make observations only. Conclusions about those observations have to be made in court, under oath, subject to cross examination. And the fact that alternative and, in fact correct, explanations for the "injury" (a yeast infection)were not offered apparently until October by Dr. Manly, really speaks to the bias of the examiner(s).

I can see how a young, fairly inexperienced, "feminist" or even "non-feminist" nurse could get carried away in the belief she was helping the victim of a terrible crime and make statements that exagerate the medical facts...which is why rigorous training with supervision is completely critical. We all come with our own sets of biases to any situation, and only by observing the highest professional standards can we hope to strain just the unvarnished facts from the stew of personal prejudice. I believe Ms. Levicy's role was pivotal in the hoax, and DUMC bears great responsibility for using a SANE nurse with Ms. Levicy's lack of training and experience and for their lack of supervision.

Observer

Anonymous said...

well, Dr Manly supervised this nurse

Anonymous said...

"So 25% would be a floor. Your 6% to 12% number is way off the mark."

In my unscientific opinion, there is no way at all the number of women coming in for full exams who are lying is anywhere north of 10%. No way at all. I asked my wife how many women she saw were a false report and she said,

"Well, your job is not to sit there and try to determine if the woman is lying or not. That isn't your role at all. You simply gather evidence and you try to make sure you follow the proper procedures while being sensitive to the invasiveness of what you are doing. Also, your job is pretty much done after the evidence gathering unless it goes to trial. If it goes to trial and you are called then certainly there will not be direct evidence of a lie by the very fact it is going to trial. If it is false, no one calls you and says, "hey, we just wanted to let you know that the woman you saw 2 weeks ago is lying. You just don't hear about it anymore.

So, I can't think of a single case in my 3 years of SANE nursing where I knew for sure the women were lying. However, there were a couple of times I had some doubts and there was one time I was pretty sure she was lying. But, again, it is not my role to determine if she is lying."

This is a topic my wife and I have discussed at length and it is one area where the system itself can be attacked (my wife disagrees). Someone becomes a SANE Nurse because they love helping women. Nurses are nurturers by nature. No one becomes a nurse so they can root out the liars. So, a bias to believe the woman is inherent to the job. I think it is comparable to a prosecutor. He doesn't decide to process the bad guys because he wants to root out the false prosecutions. He becomes a prosecutor to put the bad guys away. So, he is going to have an inherent bias. It is the ability to overcome ones bias and do their job appropriately that is important. But, lets not condemn someone because of their biases. We all have them. My problem is that I believe the very structure of SANE Nursing helps reinforce those biases.

DK

Anonymous said...

So where are all the people who told us that women wouldn't go through with the SANE exam if they were lying?

AMac said...

DK --

Sounds good.

M. Simon --

The NY prosecutor who either did or didn't claim a near-50% false accusation rate in her 1993 book (it isn't online AFAICT) was the Linda Fairstein discussed earlier. In an April 2007 article, she disavowed that figure. Check upthread for links.

To determine a false accusation rate, you have to define the numerator and the denominator.

Numerator: Cases determined factually to be false? By whom; what criteria? Or cases likely to be false? Or not provably true?

Denominator: Number of complaints out of total number presented informally to some reporting authority (Doctor, public health nurse, ED, cop)? Or for which a police report is filed? Or that make it to attention of an ADA?

Readers can check the earlier D-i-W threads for discussions and such links to studies of the subject as exist. IMO, my squishy guess of 6% to 12% is as fact-based as any other (ref. Home Office report).

Anyway, it's rather besides the point, as DK's latest post makes clear. A determination of truth or falsity is not a SANE nurse's job, and they are temperamentally unsuited to the task in any case.

If the false-accusation rate is 10%, a examiner trainee has a 65% chance of encountering at least one such case among her first 10 cases. And an 88% chance in her first 20 cases. (Assuming random distribution, etc.)

M. Simon said...

"According to a nine-year study conducted by former Purdue sociologist Eugene J. Kanin, in over 40 percent of the cases reviewed, the complainants eventually admitted that no rape had occurred (“Archives of Sexual Behavior,” Vol. 23, No. 1, 1994). Kanin also studied rape allegations in two large Midwestern universities and found that 50 percent of the allegations were recanted by the accuser.

Kanin found that most of the false accusers were motivated by a need for an alibi or a desire for revenge. Kanin was once well known and lauded by the feminist movement for his groundbreaking research on male sexual aggression. His studies on false rape accusations, however, received very little attention."

from:

American Daily

==========

Look up Kanin's work. He did a follow up study on another group of women (refrenced above) and came up with a similar number.

I'll see if I can find some more good stuff.

Anonymous said...


Numerator: Cases determined factually to be false? By whom; what criteria? Or cases likely to be false? Or not provably true?


Liar helmets are coming. Within five years we will be able to tell if people are lying by measuring their brainwaves.

I bet that rape reports go down when that happens.

M. Simon said...

Here is a look at a Canadian study that shows 3% to 7% false accusation rate but they also note:

Meanwhile, analyses of incidents involving a Toronto police squad that restricts itself to handling major rape cases where the assailant is unknown to the victim, a whopping 30 percent of cases -- 69 out of 232 cases -- turned out to be false.

So either this is a statistical anomoly. Or reporting is done differently in different parts of Canada.

M. Simon said...

From a commenter at Dr. Melissa Clouthier's:

• According to the FBI, one of every 12 claims of rape filed in the United States are later deemed 'unfounded,' meaning the case was closed because the alleged victim recanted or because investigators found no evidence of a crime.
• Howard County Police classified one out of every four rape allegations as unfounded in 1990-91.
• The National Association of Schoolmasters/Union of Women Teachers says around 600 teachers a year are falsely accused - a trebling since the 1989 Children's Act.
• Citing a recent USA Today article, discussing the miracle of DNA and FBI studies of sexual assault suspects, DNA testing exonerated about 30% to 35% of the more than 4,000 sexual assault suspects on whom the FBI had conducted DNA testing over the past three years.
• Purdue sociologist Eugene J. Kanin, in over 40% of the cases reviewed, the complainants eventually admitted that no rape had occurred (Archives of Sexual Behavior, Vol. 23, No. 1, 1994).
• 1985 the Air Force conducted a study of 556 rape accusations. Over 25% of the accusers admitted, either just before they took a lie detector test or after they had failed it, that no rape occurred.
• 1996 Department of Justice Report, of the roughly 10,000 sexual assault cases analyzed with DNA evidence over the previous seven years, 2,000 excluded the primary suspect, and another 2,000 were inconclusive.
• Linda Fairstein, who heads the New York County District Attorney's Sex Crimes Unit. Fairstein, the author of Sexual Violence: Our War Against Rape, says, "there are about 4,000 reports of rape each year in Manhattan. Of these, about 50% simply did not happen."
• Craig Silverman, a former Colorado prosecutor known for his zealous prosecution of rapists during his 16-year career, says that false rape accusations occur with "scary frequency." As a regular commentator on the Bryant trial for Denver's ABC affiliate, Silverman noted that "any honest veteran sex assault investigator will tell you that rape is one of the most falsely reported crimes." According to Silverman, a Denver sex-assault unit commander estimates that nearly 50% of all reported rape claims are false.

Anonymous said...

m simon, the article you point to has no primary references that I could find, but also contains this odd statement:


The system has managed to capture a number of people who have made numerous false allegations of sexual assault. The National Post, for example, described the plight of 34-year-old chef Jamie Nelson. Nelson was accused of sexually assaulting a woman and spent almost 3 years in jail. His accuser's name, however, was later retried and acquitted after the database revealed that his accuser had a habit of making false allegations of assault.


I have never heard of a name being tried.

In any event, the plural of anecdote is not data ...

Anonymous said...

New search engine for searching scientific journals.
The University of Virginia School of Medicine's Department of Public Health Sciences have developed a free tool for more efficient searching of the MEDLINE database of biomedical articles. The National Library of Medicines PubMed site posts its results in chronological order. In contrast, Relemed http://www.relemed.com/ "weights" the frequency and relationship of searched-for words and posts its results in order of most probable relevance. [Siadaty MS and others. Relemed: Sentence-level search engine with relevance score for the MEDLINE database of biomedical articles. MC Medical Informatics and Decision Making 7:1 doi:10.1186/1472-6947-7-1, 2007] http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6947/7/1

Anonymous said...

I think that Gottlieb, Himan and Wilson should be investigated for filing false police reports. Especially Gottlieb, who wanted his report to match, what ever Crystal said.

becket03 said...

Levicy's defenders on this thread aren't facing facts. Either through inexperience and incompetence or in service to a political agenda, she was instrumental in establishing the conditions upon which the hoax was built. She was central to Nifong's case.

She's in for a bumpy ride in the coming months. If Rae "Wrong Families" Evans decides to litigate, Tara Levicy's name will certainly appear just below Nifong's on the court documents filed.

beckett

Anonymous said...

Meeham admitts in Court, he entered into a criminal conspiracy with Nifong, but you are putting a heresay statement before him = only in America.

Anonymous said...

People, the percentage of false accusations of rape don't really help you in analysing a case like the Duke Hoax.

Looking at the rate of false rape accusations would lead you, on first hearing of the allegation in this case, to believe that there was something between a 50% and a 97% chance (depending on which of the wildly varying statistics you believe) that Crystal was telling the truth.

Here's all you needed to know: a black woman was accusing white men of a gangrape. The chances of that being true are near the chances of a gang of Amish carjackers. Yeah, it COULD happen, but what are the odds?

The only reasons any of you thought that this crime might have happened is you've been brainwashed by the meta-narrators. Educate yourselves about the bullshit that the media-academia-complex tells you about white men, and then share your knowledge with everyone you can.

Oh, but before you do, be sure to stand in front of a mirror and scream "RACIST!!" at yourself 100 times, to inure yourself to the most effective argument of the lying meta-narrators.

M. Simon said...

The group cites studies based on absurdly small samples (109 reported rapes over nine years in a single small community),

That would be Kanin. A sample size of 109 should give a result within +/- 10% of the actual number with a confidence of 95%. That would place the number at 30 to 50%. Corroborated by Kanin's later studies.

==

So what you have to ask is: how is a case like CGM's normally handled? Entered into the stats or ignored (less paper work - lowers crime stats).

It may be only 5% to 15% of cases that are entered into the justice system are false. It may be that 50% of the initial allegations are false.

Both sides might be right.

It would be interesting to find out how the Fairstein quote came about. Was she talking about what police see and later decided that it would be more politic to refer to actual court cases?

=====

BTW the Toronto stats are not anecdotes. 232 cases is a significant sample. MOE at 95% confidence would be around 6% to 7%. Which would mean a likely range of 23% to 37%. Either Toronto is an outlier or the stats are collected differently in the rest of the country.

I would guess that in the smaller jurisdictions it is easier to weed out the false claims before they are entered into the stats.

M. Simon said...

anon. May 2, 2007 10:40:00 PM,

You pick on a point I did not mention because I thought it was dubious.

The point I did mention that confounds your numbers (Toronto) you did not mention at all.

Interesting.

I guess it is easier to disect arguments I didn't make. Surely you can do better than that?

Anonymous said...

It took four main incompetent/villianous entities for this hoax to have been possible:

Accuser
Police
DA Office
Mecical Examiners

These were the main players. The most obviously complicit individuals from these groups known to date are:

Precious
Gottleib
Nifong
Wilson
Levicy

There are surely others; Himan and Arico look rather suspicious as well.

The cheerleading press and the radical faculty were lesser players, but were essential to the overall societal belief in, or acceptence of, the hoax because they did the most to engender the required concept of a politically correct frame-up. The press, especially the NYT and HS, were further responsible for creating societal acceptance by flat-out misreporting it.

Sympathetic judges like Stephens also helped to a lesser extent.

Broadhead was responsible for fallout, like Pressler's firing, but not the hoax itself.

Freaks like Wendy Murphy were merely annoying.

Anonymous said...

It took four main incompetent/villianous entities for this hoax to have been possible:

Accuser
Police
DA Office
Medical Examiners

These were the main players. The most obviously complicit individuals from these groups known to date are:

Precious
Gottleib
Nifong
Wilson
Levicy

There are surely others; Himan and Arico look rather suspicious as well.

The cheerleading press and the radical faculty were lesser players, but were essential to the overall societal belief in, or acceptence of, the hoax because they did the most to engender the required concept of a politically correct frame-up. The press, especially the NYT and HS, were further responsible for creating societal acceptance by flat-out misreporting it.

Sympathetic judges like Stephens also helped to a lesser extent.

Broadhead was responsible for fallout, like Pressler's firing, but not the hoax itself.

Freaks like Wendy Murphy were merely annoying.

Anonymous said...

Rod Allison, the Gang of 88 and their compadres in academia and the press are complicit. Maybe not in a legal sense, but surely in a moral one.

It is their babble that creates the enviroment that encourages people to do really stupid things...like create a hoax to pander to a voting constituency so one may get elected. Nifong knew he could gin up a machine of useful idiots and did.

Anonymous said...

This is a topic my wife and I have discussed at length and it is one area where the system itself can be attacked (my wife disagrees). Someone becomes a SANE Nurse because they love helping women. Nurses are nurturers by nature. No one becomes a nurse so they can root out the liars. So, a bias to believe the woman is inherent to the job... But, lets not condemn someone because of their biases. We all have them. My problem is that I believe the very structure of SANE Nursing helps reinforce those biases.

Although I can see how people might arrive at this conclusion, I must respectfully disagree. Something I've been stressing all along, on my blog, is that we are all trained to be completely objective.

If you have someone who is not, then that person doesn't belong working as a SANE nurse. We're not supposed to be biased in any way.


What many people may not realize, is that many SANE nurses are also trained in other aspects of forensics & legal nurse consulting. Forensic Nursing is not just about being a SANE nurse.

You can check my website for additional info: http://www.harfordmedlegal.com

Like so many others, I actually studied for legal nurse consulting (via the paralegal studies route)prior to becoming a forensic nurse examiner (SANE).

In fact, my intial interest, when I started, was in health care fraud and document tampering. Additional training also helps (or should) keep us objective.

SANE nurses are, in fact, required to take additional CEU training each year.

Anonymous said...

4:50 pm:

Thanks for the information.

Wouldn't it be interesting -
(if Levicy should keep her license)
- if she had to attend a
continuing ed. seminar that
featured all the wrongs she's
apparently committed in this case?


Mac

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

People criticizing Levicy obviously fail to recognize she deserves no blame because she is not the boss. She was a trainee and as such the person at fault is her boss. All trainees are expected to make mistakes and no trainees should ever be allowed to conduct independent exams without supervision from their bosses. It is grossly outrageous and irresponsible for any boss to trust any trainee to conduct any important exam. Levicy made an understandable rookie error and hopefully she has learned from the mistake. Hopefully the hospital has learned as well and will never again allow any trainee to do anything by themselves, because all rookies make mistakes.

Unknown said...

One more note. People who hate Levicy are basically saying there can be no redemption for errors in judgment. Yes her mistakes had bigger ramifications than usual but there are different standards for different people and that's the way it should be. If you're an associate at a law firm and screw up a big case you get fired because you're expected to be well-versed in your job. If you're a law student and screw up a case you're cut some slack. You're told where you went wrong and are expected to do better. To paint Tara Levicy a trainee with no experience unfairly thrust into something she and all trainees were unequipped for as a monster is wrong. She screwed up and will have that stigma attached to her for the rest of what will hopefully be a successful career. She now has a higher burden than most to prove that she has learned from the experience, but it is an opportunity she like most people are entitled to. If she hasn't learned from this and screws up again than she deserves what she gets. In the meantime she still has a chance to redeem herself in the future. That doesn't mean if the Duke 3 were my sons I wouldn't want accountability. I would and maybe Levicy will have to pay some financial settlement, but the errors she made in training cannot and should not be used to determine her career.

Anonymous said...

All Rns and medical personnel are required to do Continuing Education yearly -

Anonymous said...

This is a condensed version of Dr Johnson's Levicy Hat Trick. I have removed the hype, inuendo, the opinions of others, including Dr Johnson's.

Does this condemn Levicy? You decide.

The Levicy Exam

Mike Nifong obviously was the critical player in the case. But he had help:

This and tomorrow’s post will examine the role played by SANE nurse-in-training Tara Levicy. (Levicy has subsequently received her SANE certification, but at the time of the March 14 exam she was still in training.)

SANE nurse-in-training Levicy arrived for work at 6.45am the morning of March 14. Since Mangum still hadn’t been seen by a SANE nurse, the Charge Nurse asked Levicy to examine the patient. It remains unclear as to why Duke allowed a SANE nurse-in-training to perform this task without supervision from a certified SANE nurse.

Levicy’s Background

Tara Levicy received a B.A. in women’s studies, with a minor in outdoor education, from the University of Maine. While there, she produced and directed a showing of Eve Ensler’s Vagina Monologues, an event she recalled with fondness. After graduation, she worked as an outdoor rafting guide and an associate at Planned Parenthood in Maine. In late 2003, she went back to school at a 15-month program at the University of Southern Maine, which allows humanities majors to nursing degrees.*

Levicy joined the staff of Duke hospital as an emergency nurse in February 2005. In August 2005, she began work on her SANE certification. At the time that she examined Crystal Mangum, Levicy had less than eight months’ experience as a SANE, and scarcely a year’s experience as a nurse in any capacity.

Levicy’s Examination

On March 14, Levicy conducted a detailed interview of Mangum, which lasted more than an hour and became the basis for her report. In the interview, Mangum claimed that she last had intercourse one week before (a statement subsequent DNA tests would prove to be untrue). Mangum denied digital penetration or penetration by a foreign object (a statement she would later contradict). She said her assailants didn’t use condoms. She added that one of her assailants said he was getting married the following day.

As Levicy later admitted in a November conversation with defense attorney Doug Kingsbery, her report did not include a critical piece of information—Mangum’s claim that the “attack” occurred around 1.00am.

Following procedure, Levicy took photographs of the only “injuries” that she documented during the exam—non-bleeding scratches and bruises on Mangum’s knee and heel.

While Levicy photographed no other “injuries,” her report described Mangum as in severe pain and demonstrating tenderness to the touch virtually everywhere on the patient’s body. Levicy cited Mangum’s facial expressions and verbal responses as evidence that the patient was in pain from a rape.

Levicy and Theresa Arico, director of the SANE program at Duke University Medical Center, declined two requests for comment for this post.

The Manly Examination

Because Levicy wasn’t certified as a SANE nurse, she had to find someone else to perform the pelvic examination and evidence collection from the patient’s body.

During this portion of the exam, Levicy was simply observing. The SANE nurse-in-training noted that Mangum claimed to be in extraordinary pain when Manly inserted a speculum for the vaginal examination. This item, in her opinion, fortified her belief that the patient had suffered through a traumatic experience.

Levicy performed no rectal exam of her own, independent of Manly’s work.

*--clarified from original

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