Brocker: No legitimate reason for Nifong to request a report that had positive matches.
No one has ever denied that this is what Nifong asked for, what they went over at the 5-12 meeting.
Important to remember that there are representations in the hearings not just about what was in the report--but what was discussed with Dr. Meehan.
To buy the Nifong argument: would need to believe that Nifong forgot about everything that happened in the three meetings.
"Would be a mistake" to assume that Nifong was approaching this case logically.
In looking at intent, need to look at all the circumstantial evidence. "Overwhelming amount of circumstantial evidence" to indicate that Nifong's behavior was not a mistake--clear exactly what he was doing.
Ouch! That was a nasty blow, Brocker's follow-up.
ReplyDeleteDianna
I like Brocker's reminder that just because it wasn't mentioned in the AG's report doesn't mean that they didn't think it was important.
ReplyDeleteOOO-Undisclosed location
ReplyDeletecool
Clear, cogent, and convincing.
ReplyDelete"Brocker's reminder that just because it wasn't mentioned in the AG's report doesn't mean that they didn't think it was important."
ReplyDeleteThat would be pointing out that the AG was being "Old School"
90 minutes for lunch and deliberations
ReplyDeleteReconvene no earlier than 2. That's not too long, including lunch.
ReplyDeleteHmmm...
So what was the final tally on the number of men that Miss Crystal had sexual intercourse with in a few days?
ReplyDeleteTom Maher (bleh) is on WRAL HD channel 256 if you are in the Triangle with Time-Warner cable. The WRAL news channel has been carrying the hearing with commentary when there is time.
ReplyDeletelunch plus deliberation at an undisclosed location...gave themselves two and a half hours
ReplyDeletedoesn't sound like they think they'll spend much time arguing over whether on not he's f'd
8 minutes of deliberation
ReplyDelete77 minutes for lunch
oohh...excuse me, forgot the time difference. Only 90 mins!!!
ReplyDeleteHoly Shnikeys!!! That's hardly enough time to just have lunch and take a c__p!!!
as to earlier comments about Brocker not going yard with the fat pitches over the plate...I'd say he just touched em all!!!
ReplyDeleteLaxHooligan--Where in TX? We're in Clear Lake, but just moved back to Houston area less than a year ago after 7 years outside Raleigh.
ReplyDeleteTo the person who asked this question;
ReplyDeleteSo what was the final tally on the number of men that Miss Crystal had sexual intercourse with in a few days?
The Tally I think of known partners of CGM seems to be 12, plus some toys in front of a couple she was dancing for.
Tom E.
Dallas area
ReplyDeleteSouthwestern Univ '88
Did anyone bring the rope? 2 minute deliberation.. the rest is lunch?
ReplyDeleteDA Nifong turns into congressman Nifong in 2008, unless he joins John Edwards campaign as a chief blogger or AG candidate. Nifong would be a huge asset in gaining votes from far-left white elitists and AA racists.
ReplyDeleteBesides, he has important experience in primary elections.
Nifong defense of saying no intent and being “clueless” is of course lame.
ReplyDeleteHe has claimed he was so busy running the DA office, no time to in effect read all the motions timely and reflect on the impact of the excessive media comments.
He claims the 1800 pages of dna data was a clean report until he realized it wasn't, yet he testified the coping and document production for multiple defense lawyers was very burdensome in volume and detail. His claiming he and his office was focused on quality open production, yet he delivers a 1800 page report of data without reading it or understanding there is no translation of the data.
No need to deliberate.
ReplyDelete90 minutes for lunch.
It will be nifongs last that the taxpayers pay for.
I am hoping and praying that
ReplyDeleteNifong is not only found guilty
on all counts, but that he is disbarred.
His behavior throughout the
whole case was absolutely abhorrent.
He is a lying psychopath with an
absolutely huge and over-inflated
ego and absolutely
should not be practicing law (or lecturing
about law) in any way shape or form.
"It's sometimes hard to do the right thing, but there's no excuse for doing the wrong thing."
ReplyDeleteThat sums it up.
Serious question.. Does nifong actually think, believe, he is innocent? Does his defense team? Does anyone?
ReplyDeleteI am hoping and praying that
ReplyDeleteNifong is not only found guilty
on all counts, but that he is disbarred.
From your lips to God's ears, my friend.
Sure. The woman from the Innocence Commission, the Group of 88 and Victoria think he is a saint.
ReplyDeleteHis lawyers admitted he committed violations.
Serious question.. Does nifong actually think, believe, he is innocent? Does his defense team?
ReplyDeleteNo, of course not. It's simply a case of skin saving at this point.
I do not believe that he said "we are fucked.." I do believe that he said either, "I am fucked..." or "We are nifonged..."
ReplyDeleteI would guess the sanctions are in the several years suspended to disbarred range. I would put more money on several years suspended...
ReplyDeleteI'm glad Nifong fought. Had he just handed in his license, he would not have spent thousands on legal defense.
ReplyDeleteThis way he is disbarred and loses a bunch of equity in his house.
Did you notice in his "apology" he said "I wanted my sone to be proud of me too." Not "I want," but "I wanted." That was pure Freudian:
ReplyDeletehe isn't wanting his son to be proud of him now, taking his medicine and bettering "his community" by resigning. No, he slipped and said "I wanted him to be proud of me." He wanted to be the big hero, swaggering DA, hurling white rapists into prison, protecting the downtrodden... Of course that is why he did everyting. And he slipped when he admitted "I wantED my son to be proud of me, too."
Question for you lawyers:
ReplyDeleteCan Nifong's testimony in this hearing be used in a civil trial? Especially his answer to the question "Do you believe something happened"?
Ha,
ReplyDeleteSouthwestern 1987 !!!
BDay
12:52
ReplyDeleteEntirely correct. You have to admit the violations. Try to mitigate the intent. Try to throw as much other mitigation (no record or pattern of ethical violations, generally good rep, he's resigning so generally not a continuing threat, etc.) at the wall as possible. Hope for several years suspended.
I think HE believes he is innocent... but then, I wonder if he BELIEVES in anything?
ReplyDeleteyep sworn, testimony.
ReplyDeleteThe whole hearing was free discovery for the lax players. Not just the 3 charged, but the whole team.
Okay, most important lesson learned: ESPECIALLY if you're innocent of a charge, hire the best defense money can buy and NEVER plea bargain: that just makes the DA's job easier.
ReplyDeleteThe whole hearing was free discovery for the lax players. Not just the 3 charged, but the whole team.
ReplyDeleteAwesome. But there probably aren't enough assets there to go after Nifong. Maybe they go after Duke and Brodhead first, and use the proceeds there to go after Nifong just to twist the knife in him.
Am I correct in thinking that the only issue for the panel to decide is whether Nifong 'knowingly' violated the rules (which his lawyer admitted) or 'intentionally' violated the rules (which his lawyers claim he didn't)?
ReplyDeleteNot to be flippant, but might it not take longer to decide what to eat for lunch?
12:54
ReplyDeleteSworn testimony of a witness represented by counsel can always be used in another proceeding. The question would be"how" it could be used because there are certain evidentiary questions. But certainly to impeach if he changes his testimony.
12:57..
ReplyDeleteyou forget about future assets. The whole point of civil action. Don't let him write a book, or make money in the MSM and profit from it..
BDay
12:57
ReplyDeleteThat may work for other people, but it will not work for Nifong at this hearing.
Not to be flippant, but might it not take longer to decide what to eat for lunch?
ReplyDeleteI think it will take longer to decide between tea or water with lemon.
At least the "good reputation" up to now part suggest that the system isn't totally corrupt.
ReplyDeleteI doubt this is the last lunch the tax payers pay for... there is always jail food, if this goes (hopefully) to criminal trial... and if it only goes civil, he will need foodstamps, after the settlements....
ReplyDeleteCy will leave his behind..a sad, BROKE, lonely man... good thing he has CM's phone number!
12:57
ReplyDeleteI would be shocked if they went after Duke/Broadhead. Not much there to go on. Being unfairly treated in retrospect is not a cause of action.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete1:00
ReplyDeleteThey will go after Duke, and Duke will settle.
I bet they do go after Duke and the group of 88.
ReplyDeleteDuke has deep pockets. I rep to protect, and has settled two lawsuits already (pressler, and the grade issue).
1:01
ReplyDeleteWhat would the claim be?
1:00
ReplyDeleteIf I were the LAX coach, I'd file for unfair dismissal at the very least.
Those professors acted unethically by allowing anything other than student performance influence their grades.
Oh, I'd go after Duke and those professors.
I bet if the group of 88 are named in a lawsuit, they will push Duke to settle to protect themselves.
ReplyDelete1:02
ReplyDeleteBut if you are one of the three indicted, what would you sue on? The University has a right/duty to suspend a student accused/indicted of a violent felony.
1:00
ReplyDeleteIf I were the LAX coach, I'd file for unfair dismissal at the very least.
The coach received a settlement this month, details are secert.
There's a lot of 1st Amendment protection for the Group of 88 though. Tough to overcome.
ReplyDeleteHas the hearing panel started deliberations?
ReplyDeleteThat Duke failed to protect its students, that the presumption of innocence was absent, that the LAX players were subject to prejudice by their professors, that the coach was fired and the season cancelled, that statements were made that further incriminated the accused "Even if they didn't do what they were accused of doing, whatever they did was bad enough".
ReplyDelete1:00
ReplyDeleteYou obviously know nothing about civil litigation. Duke is extremely scared of any DISCOVERY relating to this case, including conspiracy by Negro Studies professors to railroad the boys.
Lawsuits will be sprayed all over Dook.
Has anyone here read "The Innocent Man" by John Grisham? This whole case makes me think of the DA in Ada Oklahoma Bill Peterson, with the exception that Peterson did not try his case in the press first. If Nifong had not spoken to the national media we would probably be watching the trials of the three lacrosse players instead of watching Nifong getting slowly roasted over the grill.
ReplyDeleteIts unfortunate that now we have to protect ourselves from the very people whose job it is to protect us from being unjustly accused. Personally, I think that this case has illustrated the need for reform in all aspects of the justice system. Why do prosecutors run for office in the first place? Why are there no Term limits on District Attorneys? If Nifong wasn't trying to save his frikken job then none of this would have happened. The people I feel sorry for are the lacrosse players who were accused AND the taxpayers in the State of North Carolina (its unfortunate that you will be the ones who ultimately will pay for Nifong.....
Also, if I'm one of the three players, do I want to be that person who goes after the deep pocket? Do I want this to look like it's about money? I would think they would want it to look like they wanted justice done (which a settlement check from Duke does not necessarily represent). This, today, is a BIG step in seeing that "justice" is done. Duke and the Group of 88 were mostly reacting to the hoax perpetrated by CGM and Nifong.
ReplyDelete1:04
ReplyDeleteDoesn't matter. The profs would be afraid of losing. The jury would not like them. Just fighting the case will run up law bills.
The group would pressure Duke to settle with the players and include themselves in the settlement.
So sue the group of 88 and Duke.
Use the Group to your advantage.
Someone has figured out that KC cannot screen these posts and live-blog at the same time. We have certainly been treated to some zingers this morning! Sheesh!
ReplyDelete1:06
ReplyDeleteI don't disagree there was unfairness, but last time I checked, there was no cause of action for unfairness. Nothing of those things sound like a claim to me.
1:06
ReplyDeleteI know plenty about civil litigation and these guys are not going to want to spend the next 4 years of their lives and the millions it would take to take on Duke (who is represented by folks much smarter and more skilled than Freedman and Witt) to get a couple e-mails of professors expressing opinions (protected by the 1st Amendment) that these guys are guilty. At the end of the day it doesn't get them very far.
In response to the comment about First Amendment protections for the group of 88....If the lawyers for the LAX players can prove that the comments of the group of 88 were an "incitement to riot" then first amendment protections fly out the window. Its the same situation as going into a crowded theater and yelling "fire". It has been proven time and again that the LAX players feared for their lives and had various threats made against them, on campus and off. If you are a duke student then you can expect that your tuition is about to go WAY WAY up.
ReplyDelete1:04
ReplyDeleteAnd I guess I'm missing something, but Duke would not necessarily have an obligation to indemnify/defend the professors sued especially if what they did was not within the scope of their employment (and the Listening Ad could certainly be argued to be outside).
Also, running up legal bills goes both ways. Who has more resources? The Duke three or Duke?
The players do not have to win a lawsuit in court. They just need to get to the discovery potion of the case. Duke would probably not be able to block discovery. Who voted on the ad, who paid for the ad, etc.
ReplyDeleteDuke would not want to air its dirty laundry. The case could drag on in the news for years.
Duke will settle.
I would think tt will be a lot easier to reach out of court settlements after the testimony brought forth in the hearing this week.
ReplyDeleteConsidering it has cost each of the boys' families $1 million+, I think they can definitely go after Duke. The statement made by the Group of 88 poisoned the community towards them- these are employees of Duke.
ReplyDeleteI should also state that I love Duke and have a son there. I still think they are culpable, though. Heck, they were named in the request for change of venue!
David:
ReplyDeleteThat is a point, but I think the chances of successfully arguing that here is slim. There is no call for violence. There was no hit list (as you might see in abortion doctor cases where your point was successful).
1:07
ReplyDeleteIt's Polanski, the insane genius of the blog.
KC hates his guts--LOL.
"Debrah
ReplyDelete(who is still not wearing panties)"
...what? not wanting to preserve any evidence on same?!?!?!
LOL
Anonymous at 1:07
ReplyDeleteThe families have probably double mortgaged their homes, and used up their entire retirement funds. They should get that money back - their sons should never have been charged.
Their one piece of good fortune is that they did have the resources. Imagine if they didn't.
Money is a marker, a symbol. Getting the money back will not make up for all that's happened, but it will at least get the families back to where they started in one way.
Dianna
Duke has rewarded members of the 88 by appointing them to administrative posts, e.g., dean, which makes them a part of the Duke Administration. Duke may fear a faculty member, but Duke controls who is appointed to an administrative post and thus who is representing the University. These administrative appointments are appalling and do suggest where the Duke President and Administration,and the Board of Trustees (who usually must agree to administrative appointments) place their "trust" and "confidence." It is a painful story of American Higher Education.
ReplyDeleteI hope they LAX3 at least recover all their costs. They deserve at least that.
ReplyDeleteI think it would be difficult to lump Duke and the Group of 88 together. And discovery could be stalled for a long time. Motion practice. Etc. It is not worth it. These guys would not even be looking at significant damages at the end of the day. What are the compensatory damages? Tuition? (which I'm sure has been refunded) Emotional distress would be tough (because of the causation problem). Probably no punitives -- not egregious enough conduct by Duke in light of what was told to them by the police/DA.
ReplyDeleteDuke Law '00
Also, Duke already settled the grade law suit and the Pressler law suit. If Duke has such great counsel why did they settle those? Answer: because they cannot allow discovery. It would be too damning. Which is why I think they will quickly settle the law suits from the 3 boys.
ReplyDeleteDianna:
ReplyDeleteWhile they should not have been charged, it was not Duke/88's fault they were. You can't seek damages caused by one party (Nifong,CGM) from Duke.
Duke Law '00
1:16
ReplyDeleteNo they settled those because it was clear they were in the wrong. Not so with the Duke 3. Duke HAD to suspend them giving the indictments.
Duke Law '00
Nifong’s biggest mistake was going to this trial and not giving up his law license. As another poster pointed out before this is free discovery for the LAX players. Furthermore public opinion has defiantly been swayed by this, look at today’s New York Times. This trial also gives credibility to KC, and Dr. Anderson, it establishes that they were dealing with facts not tin foil hats.
ReplyDeleteAs far as who I think defense should go after first in civil trials;
Nancy Grace deep pockets, stupid comments.
The New York Slimes, they need to stop publishing or change.
Duke University (they have already settled with Pressler).
DPD deep pockets morons running the joint will not be able to defend themselves.
Nifong – take from him whatever they can get.
All the rest will give in after these slime balls lose.
Tom E.
The damage to the young men's reputations impacts future earnings.
ReplyDeleteIf I were the mom of one of the boys, I'd want costs plus $400,000. That covers the top quarters for 2 on the QMII's round-the-world cruise, and I'd need a vacation like that to help recover from this nightmare.
Duke would settle.
ReplyDeleteThe other option is to keep the story alive in the news. Have faculty and Admins put through discovery.
The school has billions in its endowment fund, spending $10 mil to move on may be worth it.
Tom E.
ReplyDeleteJust not that much civilly that can been done vis-a-vis those parties (other than perhaps Nifong and even that will be problematic given his immunity as proscetor).
Duke Law '00
1:20
ReplyDeleteThere is no way Duke would pay $10 m. or $1 m.
Duke Law '00
ReplyDeleteThen the State of North Carolina, and Durham, had best start contemplating the quickest, least painful way to come up with the money.
And Duke's behavior really needs to be punished - I'm not a fan of "sue the pants off everyone in sight" usually, but the first few weeks were disgusting, and Duke's administration was not particularly helpful to the presumption of innocence.
Or so it appeared from California.
Dianna
f you are a duke student then you can expect that your tuition is about to go WAY WAY up.
ReplyDeleteDuke's endowment is $4.5 Billion. It grew by 12.6% last year. While they would rather spend $3 million elsewhere, paying off the lawsuits will not be placed on the backs of future students.
"I'm glad Nifong fought. Had he just handed in his license, he would not have spent thousands on legal defense.
ReplyDeleteThis way he is disbarred and loses a bunch of equity in his house."
Nifong likely hasn't spent a damned dime of his own money (given for his lousy 30 years of service) for this. NC taxpayers paying his way, sickening isn't it?
His personality traits have been well known in Durham for 30 years and he managed to keep his job. Today he is one day closer to cushy pension. Carefully note that he provided NO DATE for his resignation. Somehow he will find a golden parachute and land softly. His type has an uncanny survivor instinct.
Many folks are going to be disappointed at the lack of forcefulness in his punishment.
Duke Law '00
ReplyDeleteI hate to say this, and you will hate to hear it...I know I did when I was a young idealistic buck. You can seek damages from whomever you darned well please. Getting them by way of a court order may be nigh upon impossible. But if the proceedings will be embarassing or onerous in some other way to the defendant, you may well recover beyond your wildest dreams.
You need to sit on the bench and watch the game closely and see how the veterans play before you start telling everybody what a great coach/strategist you are.
Can't they go afterr the hoaxer? Defamation or something? The State said they were not charging her, the duke 3 can? She started it all...
ReplyDeleteTO beck--
ReplyDeleteI have tuned into HDTV channel 256 and they are covering storms and weather stories from decades gone by at this time.
Was it reported that they will return to live coverage of the Bar proceedings at 2PM?
Debrah
yeah, whats $10 mil compared to all the free publicity this case has given Duke.
ReplyDeleteLet alone what a lawsuit and some interesting leaked discovery when the group of 88 are questioned. They did (supposedly) vote as a department on the ad. Also who paid for the ad? Dept funds?
I cannot believe that Duke wants the headline of the N&O to be based on emails and statements made by the Group of 88 professors. They are whack-jobs and would shock the public with their views. Brodhead and the BOT will not want the world to see the truth of who is teaching in the angry studies depts there. They will setlle all right...
ReplyDeleteKC: IIRC, Nifong handled a criminal case involving Mangum's family back before he was treated for prostate problems. Yet he claimed in his testimony that he first met CGM when she made her rape claim in 2006. If correct, I wish somebody would at least point that out because he meant to leave the impression he had no idea who CGM was.
ReplyDeleteDuke Law '00 You are probably right, but I think Nancy's comments are slander even if she says she was just repeating Nifong's statements. She is on video going after these young men even after a reasonable person knowing the facts should have known they were innocent.
ReplyDeleteTom E.
Very relieved that it will be over today....as Williamson has promised.
ReplyDeleteI'm worn out trying to follow all of this and take care of the "tasks of life" at the same time.
Good thing KC travels light and, like most men, is low maintenance. (LIS!) Otherwise, he'd never be able to continue his 24/7 routine.
As I have said before, if I were in Vegas, I'd bet a hundred thousand on Mikey's disbarrment.
Anything less will be yet another travesty.
Debrah
Duke Law '00
ReplyDeleteYou better start thinking like a lawyer, my friend.
Consider this scenario (bearing in mind Dook's commitment to "diversity"):
Boys' lawyers discover that Holloway, Farred, and Lubiano had multiple meetings in which they discussed how they could exploit their Dook-conferred influence on Mike Nifong and Brodhead.
I'd be shitting myself right now, if I were Holloway or Lubiano.
You think the listening statement had a devastating impact on the viability of AAAS programs nationwide? Discovery just might prove that Wahneema et al. are the manipulative racists we already know them to be.
Dook will not want this info let out of the bag.
And to the numskull who made the argument that the boys don't want this to be "about money"--remember, 1 of the best ways of punishing your adversaries is taking their money.
Just ask the NAACP or the recipients of academic welfare at Dook.
Polanski
1:22
ReplyDeleteI didn't realize I had made any statements about being a good strategist.
Just people are a little unrealistic about who you can sue for whom. First, you have to have a lawyer willing to bring a frivolous case. Then you have to survive a motion to dismiss. Then a dispositive motion. Etc.
Just saying sue everybody and the money will start flowing is not realistic.
Thanks Pop for the advice though.
Duke will pay a ton to settle the claims of the 3 indicted players. That's a given -- anyone who thinks otherwise is naive. Expect an announcement next week. The bigger question is whether Duke pays anything to the non-indicted players who Duke also put through hell.
ReplyDeleteTo michael @12:50
ReplyDeleteThanks for that cogent, insightful ditty...now why not try to conjure up some useful commentary that can be both constructive, and does not feed YOUR over-inflated ego
Polanski:
ReplyDeleteI am thinking like lawyer. I love frivolous lawsuits. Because. They. Get. Thrown. Out. And you generally look silly for bringing it in the first place.
aren't they forgetting that Nifong's job was to seek the truth. Everything that he did focused on conviction. This is why he was not forthcoming
ReplyDeleteDuke law 00
ReplyDeleteEven if you believe someone may not want money, These 3 players owe millions to defense lawyers.
They will be suing.
The question is not if but when and who.
The answer is everyone is sight and mostly deep pockets.
sue the bit players so they can not profit from selling stories.
sue Duke, Durham, and the state for the big bucks.
How true is it that an official of Duke told the LAX Team NOT to call their parents when this first happened? That alone is enraging and worth suing over in my, admittedly non-lawyerly, book.
ReplyDeleteI just heard decision in 25 min.
ReplyDeleteDuke Law '00
"Nifong’s biggest mistake was going to this trial and not giving up his law license."
ReplyDeleteWould this be the best lesson for citizens?:
The Duke players' biggest mistake was submitting DNA without a court order. Had a court order been necessary first, then maybe Nifong would have been stopped early in the investigation.
A member of the public (potential defendent) has the best leverage during the initial investigation. If questioned, it is tempting to think HELPING the authority figures is the way to have the situation go away, as the Duke Players thought. But this case shows the opposite: the Duke Players should have insisted on a DNA warrant. Had any ONE of the players insisted on a DNA warrant, perhaps the DNA evidence would have received judicial scrutiny sooner.
Hey Debrah,
ReplyDeleteIn an earlier blog, I stated that I thought I loved you. I'm still contemplating...
On another note, if the DA is disbarred, and you live in Raleigh, breakfast is on me at Big Ed's...
1:32
ReplyDeleteMaybe you're right. I don't think so, though. I think any civil lawsuits these guys bring will be carefully considered and reasonable. Also remember in a civil case you can get these guys on the stand. Do these guys want to be testifying about the party for the next 5 years (if they sued everyone, you can count on it taking years). I thought these guys wanted to move on. Litigation is hell. Litigating against big entities with resources like Duke, Durham, NC, Wall Street Times, etc. is worse.
Just so everyone's clear, I am squarely in the Duke 3's camp. Just trying to temper the sue-happy crowd with some counterpoints.
Duke Law '00
How dare KC take a break and eat instead of posting a summary/commentary!
ReplyDelete/sarc
Brocker's counterpoint that Knifong did know about the "non-probative" matches, which had been revealed to Knifong during one of his three meetings with Dr. Meehan, but did not reveal them to the students' lawyers I think is very damaging. Definitely a sin of omission. It's like sitting idly by and not doing anything to rectify a situation that you're a party to.
ReplyDeleteThere's just no way that the G88 can be held civilly liable for anything they did. They may be reprehensible, but you're dreaming if you think any of them will suffer any legal damages from this. Once the grade discrimination case was settled, there's not anything else that anyone is going to do to them.
ReplyDeleteThe BAR's decision will effect the behaviors of lawyers and the public:
ReplyDelete- If 3-5 years, then lawyers see to watch their own actions, but only their own actions. Citizens, who might become the accused, see to cooperate As Little As Possible with investigations: insist on a DNA warrant. (Anyone who's watched enough CSI can learn this lesson.)
- If disbarment, then lawyers see to watch their own actions AND to not tolerate poor performance by their colleagues. Don't tolerate poor ethics and don't tolerate lazyness. Potential similar reactions from police investigators and judges. Overall quality of justice is improved: Old School attitude returned and with the Rules/will to enforce it on each other.
- If disbarment, then Citizens will see the Sentence as a aberration: News: The first DA in ## years to receive disbarment!. Thus Citizens see the Nifong-Duke case as an aberration; one time event. Citizens will still cooperate with police investigations in the same level as prior, or only slightly less cooperative and enlightened suspicion.
Also, everyone think about the guys who are released from prison after YEARS behind bars. Those guys generally get in the $200K to several million range. If you think these guys who -- even though what happened is horrible -- did not spend a day in jail are going to get $10 M because it was "unfair" I just don't think so.
ReplyDeleteDuke Law '00
Guess we will just have to wait and see, steven.
ReplyDeleteThe paid ad is what will hurt them, IMHO.
Thank you Steve.
ReplyDeleteDuke Law '00
1:38 PM
ReplyDeleteWell, I guess the False Accusation buys still buys a person the most bang for their buck. It's the method of choice for the "other criminals."
1:38
ReplyDeleteFirst Amendment. They were entitled to take out a paid ad expressing an opinion based on what they thought the facts were at the time. They did not slander any identified parties. They did not incite anyone to violence. You have to know the statement is false or act with reckless disregard. You can't prove those elements.
Duke Law '00
1:38
ReplyDeleteI didn't mean "you" btw. I meant whoever would bring such a case.
How much difference would it make if a civil suit is filed, say, in Maryland, which is the local news area for the Washington Post? Think Duke has more to fear from a more national newspaper covering the story regularly?
ReplyDeleteChristy:
ReplyDeleteFirst, there are rules on where you can bring a case. There would have to br proper jurisdiction over Duke and proper venue. That would make it harder.
Duke Law '00
Duke Law '00,
ReplyDeleteYour statement that litigation is hell is spot on. However, I suspect that you (like most lawyers) have not had the unique and horrifying experience of being on the level of litigant, only that of counsel. I can speak from having experience at both levels and at that of expert hired to provide tactical and strategic planning, that the boys families right now are probably not worried about airing any dirty laundry in public, they've already survived worse than what would be to come, and would probably settle or drop prior to depositions. The point of filing is not always to get to court, or even to depositions, but sometimes to intimidate someone into doing the right thing. A demand letter is the first level, it doesn't require a court order...kinda like an NTO. Look how effective a non-judicial instrument was in this case.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteActually...remember the wording of the Ad..."Thank you for not waiting to make your voices heard"....it was tantamount approval (from Duke Faculty) of the Pot Bangers and Protesters. That tantamount approval led to a hostile campus environment for the players and their families. Creating a hostile environment means that the presumption of innocence was not obtainable. What will happen during discovery is that someone will contact the paper and find out WHO paid for the ad and by what means. If the money came from the university then that means the Ad had to have gone through some approval process before the advertisement was ever bought (I work at a university...thats how things work). If the Ad was approved by the administration of the university (IE their Financial/Purchasing people) then the university is responsible (since purchasing people usually have the ability to negotiate and execute contracts for the university).
ReplyDeleteDuke Law 00
ReplyDeleteLawsuit:
Did Duke tell some players not to tell their parents, or get a lawyer? In a position of power telling someone not to get a lwyer or call parents.
Did a Duke employee leak the skinning email?
Did Duke let the DPD search dorm rooms without a warrant?
Was the ad paid for with Duke funds?
Were the protest marches organized by duke employees use duke facilities? Did the marches threaten the players (castration)?
You do not have to win the case, just keep it in the news, Duke will settle.
1:47
ReplyDeleteI agree they have been through the worst. But depos and discovery etc. would take up a lot of their time and energy for years. These guys want to finish college (Reade and Colin) and start careers (Evans).
Duke Law '00
1:47
ReplyDeleteWell written. Another way of looking at it is ethical extortion:
You don't want to pay me? Fine, I'm gonna publish a long article about your Negro Studies professors.
And people are definitely getting fed up with financing unintelligent, racist blacks.
Or just think of it as guerrilla warfare.
1:51
ReplyDeleteWho cares? Not a cause of action.
No. DPD got it.
No. Himan said he showed up by himself.
Who cares? Who paid for the ad is immaterial.
Not a Duke directed action. Even if professor or student organized. No vicarious liability for Duke.
My point is that I'm not sure how you even get in the door in the first place. And these are pretty meaningless (in a civil action I mean; I would love to know more about some of the internal happenings).
Duke Law '00
Re: Duke Law '00
ReplyDelete""Also, everyone think about the guys who are released from prison after YEARS behind bars. Those guys generally get in the $200K to several million range. If you think these guys who -- even though what happened is horrible -- did not spend a day in jail are going to get $10 M because it was "unfair" I just don't think so.""
And consider the penalty for the prosecutors in some of those cases has been promotion after promotion, not ethics hearings, as well.
Hey, if they are back at 2pm, that means they came to a decision quickly. That's probably is not good for Nifong.
ReplyDeleteDavid:
ReplyDeleteLegally, the conclusion does not follow from the premise.
Duke Law '00
DL '00
ReplyDeletePerhaps you haven't paid attention...this won't make it past pre-discovery. I can assure you that PI's and other resources have already uncovered much that would be damning if made public, and that merely sharing a tidbit of that would be very problematic for Duke. It's blackmail/extortion if it's done without seeking redress for a grievance...if done by lawyers to make right a wrong, it's called good lawyering. Trust me...we have not seen the last of good lawyering on behalf of the Lax players in this case.
And I'm struck by the irony of folks saying "I don't care if it's legally proper to sue (i.e., not frivolous) let's employ ethical blackmail to reditribute money around." Isn't that what this disciplinary hearing is about? Not following the rules? Doing something shady because in your gut you think the ends will jusify the means? Isn't that what were ticked at Nifong for?
ReplyDeleteDuke Law '00
Duke Law '00...
ReplyDeleteSay it takes 4 years, but they ultimately get $10M each after their legal bills are paid. Pretty good scroll for a 25 year old. That's JJ Reddick-type money!
I think for the three to find at least a plausible cause of action against Duke won't be difficult. Duke will of course settle because they want this to go away. Otherwise it comes down to putting their academic policies on trial.
ReplyDeleteAs for the lax'ers being gun-shy, I doubt it. After all, they're still getting tarred with the "whatever they did was bad enough" brush. Detailed accounts of the party and their specific actions would only make them look less guilty in the long run, which would be worse for Duke.
No, Duke will do the math and settle.
A specific few members of the 88 may get sued for things they said individually; Houston Baker comes to my mind at the top of the list. However, I do think that the ad itself is a slippery target. Fortunately, lots of people did lots of talking beyond the ad.
A good month ago (at least) I read that the boys' families had asked Duke to cover their legal expenses. Duke did not say "no".
ReplyDelete1:57
ReplyDeleteSo if Nifong thought he was redressing a grievance against CGM when he withheld the DNA it is OK? See the slippery slope there?
DL '00
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ReplyDelete2:00
ReplyDeleteThere are not going to get $10M. There are no causes of action. There are no real big money damages caused by Duke (and not by others). There are no punitives. Where is the $10M coming from?
DL '00
It seems to me with massive legal bills the players must sue to recover.
ReplyDeleteThe obvious parties would be the Durham PD and the State.
JLS says....,
ReplyDeletere: Dukelaw00
In case you missed it Duke is settling all of these cases. Duke will quickly and the hope quietly settle with Evans, Finnerty and Seligmann.
They settles the grade retaliation suit. They settled with the lacrosse coach before the was even a filing, I believe.
How would the Duke constiuencies feel if Brodhead and Steele after settling with other they fought Evans, Finnerty and Seligmann tooth and nail in civil court? I can not imagine they will not settle as soon as possible.
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ReplyDeleteWhen looking at the Ad I just noticed something else...there is not any indemnification of Duke on the Ad. IE: the statement that says "The views and opinions expressed here are not necessarily the views of Duke University. etcetera etcetera...."
ReplyDeleteDL '00
ReplyDeleteDid you skip the class early on where they explained the difference between civil and criminal law? The gravity and responsibility placed on a prosecutor in exchange for a presumtion of good faith is huge. In civil matters, the gloves come off because there is often not legislative law that outlines who wins...it's who's got the best version of the truth and what legal precedent instructs the court on the matter at hand. I can assure you that divorce attorneys use "ethical blackmail" all the time to gain non-equitable distributions of assets. You are obviously very naive in this. I'm not trying to be condescending, I just think you haven't been in the tough streets much.
DL '00, of course I care about the rule of law. Ask anyone who knows me: I'm a rules person to the nth degree. My point is that somehow the LAX3 (at least) and their families should recoup their expenses.
ReplyDeleteIf I were on the Duke Board of Visitors (or whatever they call it), I would insist on some new guidelines on what faculty could publish as faculty. Individuals have an absolute right to expression, and a group of 88 individuals could assemble and pony up for the ad, but to do some under the aegis of "Duke Faculty" is wrong.
JLS:
ReplyDeleteSee discussion above. There are potential actions there. Contract, etc. The Duke 3 don't have the same. Because Duke settled one or another case does not mean they will pay each $10M just because.
That's my only point. These guys are not going to be sue-happy.
DL '00
JLS says...,
ReplyDeletere: DL 00
Your belief is that there is ZERO chance a jury would want to deter Duke and other schools from behaving as Duke did in this matter in the future? That is afterall the purpose of punitive damages.
Are you trying to get us to doubt you are a lawyer, Duke or otherwise with your no punitive damages comment?
Does anyone really think the players are going to eat their legal bills 3mil+?
ReplyDeleteThere will be lawsuits. And a lawyer once said, sue everyone in sight, especially deep pockets.
And Duke may be legally ok, but not morally. They hung the team out to dry. So shaking the money tree is not wrong. If Duke will only settle if they think it is their best interest.
2:04
ReplyDeleteThank you for the education. C'mon you know the point of my argument. So it's OK for a civil lawyer to bend the rules of he thinks it's justified, but not for a prosecutor? Flimsy logic to me.
DL '00
JLS:
ReplyDeleteTo have to get int the door first. You can't just ask for punitives. No court that I know of would permit a punitive damages claim to go forward against Duke. It would be reversed in 30 seconds on appeal. What I haven't heard is anyone tell me the claim that would be filed against Duke. What is the claim?
I just think there is a lot of venom here, misdirected. Nifong and CGM were the worst. Everything else was bad, but didn't cause this fiasco.
While the Private Investigator (PI) hints by 1:57PM are intriguing, I doubt anyone who knew hard info would risk their case by posting here.
ReplyDeleteI've been the litigant in a Consumer Case. It was only in the Breach of Warranty / Lemon Law area, but I did learn a basic rule: you can only be "made whole". Despite stress and hassle, your dollars are linked to provable amounts. In a car case, it's the purchase price less depreciation. Your time counts for nothing (but your lawyer's time can be included).
To get to Punitive Damages or try for a Class Action is rarely worth the emotional effort by the litigant. You can only be "made whole" and must show with documents and comparable cases how you calculated "made whole".
That's my layman's understanding.
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ReplyDeleteWhat's going on? Shouldn't they have reconvened by now?
ReplyDeleteDL '00, I think the technical term for what you were describing at 1:58 is "legal extortion." Quite a common practice if >1M Google hits is any indication.
ReplyDeleteHere we go!
ReplyDelete2:08
ReplyDeleteYou have an excellent lay understanding. That is my point precisely. Against Duke, what would make these guys whole? Tuition? Some nuisance emotional distress? You only get punitives in particular fact patterns not at issue here (like you made a food product, knew it was laced with poison, didn't tell anyone to max profits).
DL '00
KC--
ReplyDeleteCould you please delete the idiocy at (1:00PM)?
Polanski is doing his stalking Sybil act again.
Debrah
hearing started
ReplyDeleteThe audio is back on wral.com. NO video yet
ReplyDeleteTHEY'RE BACK ON THE AIR!
ReplyDeleteHere we go!
ReplyDeleteDuke advised/forced players not to contact lawyers or their parents.
ReplyDeleteThey propably leaked private email.
Duke Medical Center (Tara et al) is clearly guilty of various actions.
Duke funds were (most likely) used to pay for the Listening Ad.
Official Duke equipment were used for the ad.
Duke promoted racist actions and violent/hostile atmosphere by AA professors.
Duke can and will be sued.
Just background noise. And I was so excited!
ReplyDeleteI don't have video yet either. I trust no one else does.
ReplyDeleteDL '00
ReplyDeleteWould agree with the premise that a windfall would be out of line, but can promise you that the aggrieved parties will find a way to be made whole.
I've lost my feed! Is the panel back yet?
ReplyDeleteDianna
Jamil:
ReplyDeleteWhat is the claim?
DL '00
JLS says...,
ReplyDeletere: DL00
Are you claiming that in some tort actions one can not ask for punitive damages?
Here is a definnition with bolding added by me of punitive damages:
DAMAGES, PUNITIVE - The purpose of punitive damages is to punish a defendant and to deter a defendant and others from committing similar acts in the future.
Plaintiff has the burden of proving that punitive damages should be awarded, and the amount, by a preponderance of the evidence. punitive damages may be awarded only if defendant's conduct was malicious, or in reckless disregard of plaintiff's rights.
Conduct is malicious if it is accompanied by ill will, or spite, or if it is for the purpose of injuring another.
Conduct is in reckless disregard of plaintiff's rights if, under the circumstances, it reflects complete indifference to the safety and rights of others.
Are you claimin no jury would possibly hold that Duke did not operate in complete indifference to the rights of Evans, Finnerty and Selgimann?
Do you work in the Duke PR department?
The easiest cause of action to pursue would be intentional and/or negligent infliction of emotional distress, caused by Duke faculty and students harassing the lax'ers and the administration failing to address this according to Duke's stated policy.
ReplyDeleteJust a quick note while we are all waiting with the great power of the internet to broadcast throughout the world where are yo'all from. I am in Wisconsin.
ReplyDeleteTom E.
As part of any settlement with Duke, I'd like to see the three buildings on campus that house the most members of the Group of 88 renamed Evans, Finnerty, and Seligmann Hall.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteMongolia. We are very interested in seeing the great criminal Nifong face justice and become beheaded.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteJLS:
ReplyDeleteYes, it is settled that you cannot ask for punitives in every tort action.
And yes, there is no way under the facts of this case that punitives would go forward against Duke.
No I do not. I don't think Duke's initial reaction was great. I do not subscribe to the belief that Duke was out to get these guys as an institution. Some profs sure were. But Duke is not necessarily responsible for that. Again, I think it is pretty standard that colleges/universities suspend students accused/indicted of violent felonies.
DL '00
2:14
ReplyDeleteMaybe. That's a hard claim to prove up though.
DL '00
okay...the suspense is killing me!!! Get some video on of Nifong sitting there twitching, at least, so I can have something to enjoy with my popcorn!!!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteDecision coming in the next few minutes.
ReplyDeletePanel coming in now.
DL '00
Thud-dump Thud-dump, Thud-dump!
ReplyDeleteGo to the cable news channels. Panelists returning. Why isn't WRAL.COM braodcasting?
ReplyDeleteFox news is carrying it.
ReplyDeleteits on fox new cable
ReplyDeletewral back now
ReplyDeleteIt's back now with video.
ReplyDeleteThree witnesses to be called in Phase II.
ReplyDeleteJLS says...,
ReplyDeletere: DL00
What class of tort actions are punitive damaged not permitted and how do any actions arising out of this case fall in those classes?
BTW, a Duke Attorney is said to have advised Duke student under a major police criminal investigation not to call there parents or seek attorneys. Do you think that meets Duke's duty of care to Duke students?
HOLY ####. Nifong looks like he is going to die.
ReplyDeleteDL '00
Tom E.
ReplyDeleteI'm in San Jose, California.
And my blood sugar is crashing. They've got to get back soon, or I'm going to faint from the suspense.
unanimous verdicts
ReplyDeleteMSNBC is covering it LIVE.
ReplyDeleteDebrah
and guilty given that there will be a phase 2
ReplyDeleteAnd here we go
ReplyDeleteTom E.
ReplyDeleteBy your use of the word "yo'all" it is clear that you are not from around here.
That is a unique construct, to be sure.
I live in Durham. I want Nifong gone. More than that I cannot say, given the history of local law enforcement in charging innocent people.
Nifester looks ill.
ReplyDeletefirst count - "yes" - he's in violation.
ReplyDeleteNifong is looking like he's going to puke as Williamson is reading all the "yes" verdicts to the bar complaints.
ReplyDeleteyes yes yes yes yes
ReplyDeleteNifong's crying again.
ReplyDeleteWill he please suck it up? He did all these things for political gain, and he chose the actions, and therefore chose the consequences.
Wow, ALL the LAX players may have a chance at civil damages!
ReplyDeleteDoes he have an envelope, ala dwyer?
ReplyDeleteNew thread, nothing said by KC yet.
ReplyDeleteDianna
Rats. A very technical basis for allowing Nifong off the hook on the condom issue. A bad judgment... but hopefully that is the only one Nifong wins.
ReplyDelete