The order does, however, contain an unusual line: “Although Plaintiffs initially disagreed as to the contents of the order, the parties have now submitted a Stipulated Protective Order for consideration.” The line
is unusual because Bob Ekstrand, as Duke’s attorneys apologetically conceded,
never agreed to such a submission. It seems likely that, nonetheless, the order
will remain in place (one already exists for the Carrington lawsuit).
In various court filings since January, Ekstrand has
attached three discovery items: a deposition from associate AD Chris Kennedy; a
deposition from Duke PD officer Gary Smith; and two e-mail chains of Brodhead
and his advisors. Given Duke’s determination to keep the discovery secret, it’s
worth reviewing the scant material that has become public.
Smith Deposition
The Smith
deposition was characterized by the officer’s memory problems—he said he
couldn’t recall at least 30 items, including (preposterously) whether there was
any conversation about the lacrosse
case among Duke police officers in the early weeks of the affair. When not
recalling, Smith was stonewalling: he purported to have no opinion on the
integrity of the Nifong-Gottlieb investigation. (That would be the
investigation of course, that set the stage for Nifong’s disbarment.)
Perhaps the most damaging admission in the Smith deposition,
however, came in an apparent contradiction. Smith asserted that—on his own
volition, and without a subpoena—he gave to Sgt. Gottlieb the FERPA-protected
keycard information. And, he added, he didn’t tell his superiors he had done
so, because he didn’t want them to know he had done wrong.
Yet when Smith e-mailed Gottlieb to tell the Durham officer
he’d need to subpoena the information Smith had improperly supplied him, Smith
blind-cc’d the director of the Duke Police Department, Robert Dean. Naturally, Smith
couldn’t remember who told him to bcc Robert Dean. But if he had concealed his
mistake from his superiors, why would he have bcc’d anyone at the Duke PD?
Kennedy Deposition
The Kennedy
deposition contained no comparable blockbusters, but did feature some
telling insights. Perhaps the most disturbing regarded the (successful) NCAA
appeal to grant the non-seniors on the 2006 team an extra year of eligibility. In
his draft of the request, Kennedy referenced the (undeniable) on-campus threats
to the lacrosse players, as well as the dubious behavior of some Duke
professors. The Duke counsel’s office—committed, it seems, to the
Bowen/Chambers line—removed these items from the document sent to the NCAA.
Kennedy also provided what seems to be obvious analysis,
regarding Pres. Brodhead’s infamous “whatever they did was bad enough” remark.
He said, "I think that someone without any knowledge of any of the facts, someone on the outside would again draw the conclusion that some kind of crime had been committed and that Brodhead believed they were guilty. And furthermore, I think it was incredibly indiscreet to say ‘whatever they did was bad enough.'"
Administrators’ E-mails
To date, only
five contemporaneous e-mails from the time have been made public. The
whitewash Bowen/Chambers committee cited a handful of others, but didn’t
reproduce any of them—and, perhaps most damningly, cited none of the e-mails
uncovered in the current lawsuit, raising questions of exactly what the racial preferences
duo saw.
The e-mails shed some light on one of the unanswered (and,
perhaps, unanswerable) questions of the case: what motivated Brodhead?
Did fear—of being labeled a racist, of facing a faculty revolt
from the Group of 88—form the principal guide of his actions? Or did he, in
fact, privately sympathize with the Group’s response to the case, and issue
documents such as his April 5, 2006 open letter because he shared the Group’s
worldview?
The e-mails provided some ammunition for advocates of the second
viewpoint—as Brodhead implied that the appropriate frame for the case
might be the movie Primal Fear, in which a
criminal defendant fools his lawyer into believing his innocence, only to end
the film by admitting that he had committed murder.
It shouldn’t come as much surprise that Duke doesn’t want
more of Brodhead’s movie criticism to see the public light.