Monday, May 05, 2014
The Independent: Durham Needs a DA with Passion, Like Nifong & Cline
Tuesday is primary day in North Carolina. The Independent, the Triangle’s alternative
weekly, recently made its endorsement for the Democratic
primary for DA.
The Independent
hosts the columns of Hal Crowther, hailed
by author William D. Cohan as “the conscience of progressive thinkers in
North Carolina.” That would be the same
Crowther who penned a vicious summer 2006 column featuring Peter Wood
speaking disparagingly of the accused lacrosse players he had taught in his
class. When the mother of one of the players, Reade Seligmann, called up Wood
to ask him on what basis he had attacked her son, Wood hung up on her.
(In an intriguing item, Cohan revealed in the WYNC interview
that he knew Wood when he was at Duke, explaining the book’s heroic treatment
of the discredited
lacrosse
critic.)
Indy has quite a
record on endorsements.
In the 2006 DA’s primary, the Independent urged
voters to “look beyond the recent handling of one case” (including the DA’s
myriad ethically improper public statements) and vote for Mike Nifong. The
paper’s board praised Nifong’s “hardworking and
professional manner,” and suggested that “colleagues and legal opponents alike
laud his sense of fairness and justice.” (This statement came in the midst of
the lacrosse case; Joe Cheshire’s first press conference calling into question
Nifong’s sense of fairness and justice had occurred weeks before.) But Nifong
was acceptable ideologically, and so he earned the nod.
In the fall campaign, Indy
climbed back on board the
Nifong bandwagon. Editors fretted at how “Nifong has a target on his back,”
and then offered a bizarre recapitulation of events of the year. “Nifong and
the Durham Police Department may have mishandled the case,” Indy delicately noted, and—in a
Cohanesque interpretation—perhaps Nifong spoke out of turn when he “publicly
condemned the defendants before completing his investigation.” But, the editors
assured their readers, “the district attorney has made amends.” The nature of
those “amends” was a mystery in October 2006 and remains a mystery now.
In the event, even if he was seeking to convict innocent
people without any evidence, The
Independent concluded that “We're sticking with the endorsement we made for
the April primary: Mike
Nifong.” After all, “maybe he
has a few tricks up his sleeve.” Tricks, perhaps, like withholding exculpatory evidence.
Nifong was removed as district attorney amidst an ethics scandal.
In the 2008 primary, after conceding they were hoodwinked by
Nifong, the editors issued
a glowing endorsement of Tracey Cline. Identity politics was front and
center in the selection; the editorial suggested that Cline, “as a black woman, could be an
excellent role model for the young African Americans caught in the system.”
In a remarkable
passage for a paper that had enabled Nifong, the editorial whitewashed Cline’s
role in the lacrosse case. “She is putting to rest questions,” Indy mused, “that she was involved in
Nifong's lacrosse prosecution, a concern among some critics. She told the Independent that police officers came to her
asking advice about what paperwork to complete, a search warrant or a
non-testimonial order, and when they had completed the paperwork, filed it with
then Assistant District Attorney David Saacks, who signed it. ‘I didn't sign
anything,’ Cline said. ‘All I did was advise them, which I should do on every
single case. Under the same situation, any district attorney would do the same
thing. The statute requires you to do that.’”
Of course, the questions extended beyond her giving an
“advice” for a NTO that covered some people the police had no cause to believe
even were in Durham the night of the party. The questions involved what role Cline—second chair to Nifong in the
trial that William D. Cohan desperately wished had occurred—played in assisting
Nifong during 2006. Cline’s Wonderland-like implication that she had never talked
about the case with Nifong fooled no one—except, it seems, the Indy editors.
Cline
was removed as district attorney amidst an ethics scandal.
So who has the paper endorsed in the first
post-Cline election? In an editorial that didn’t mention Indy’s endorsements in either 2006 or 2008, the paper endorsed a
“veteran defense attorney” named Brian Aus. What accounted for the choice? “He seems to have more passion than his opponents.”
And, by the way? According to the editors, “passion is the
very quality that sunk Nifong and Cline.”
It’s good to see that for the Independent, reconsidering long-held criteria in face of
contradictory evidence isn’t a useful task.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
14 comments:
Hal Crowther is far more of a man than you are, Prof. Johnson.
When I was a kid I had a drunken uncle who made comments like that. I think he got hit in the head in
WWII..
So much for the issues.
@ Charles Rector 2:23 AM
Put down the Controller and step away from the Nintendo.
You're wasting much to much time with video games.
[Clicking on your name reveals this]
Charlie, your ad hominem attacks are feeble and lack wit. Pathetic.
Did someone appoint you official 'Male Measurer' ? Are you one quarter the man that Crowther is ?
T r o l l . . A l e r t
Charles Rector has been a busy troll today.
1. He posted the 2:23 am attack, above.
2. He posted a 1 star Amazon review of "Until Proven Innocent" :
Bad Book about a Controversial Case
Until Proven Innocent is a travesty of a book. It is a prime example of a quickie book that is written with complete disregard of well known facts about this particular case.. There are other, better, books by such authors as Don Yaeger & William D. Cohan about this case that you should read instead
3. He posted a 5 star Amazon review:
The Single Best Book about the Case.
William D. Cohan has created a masterpiece of both investigative reporting & history. Of the 7 book [sic] thus far published about the case, it is the best one yet. As such it is heartily recommended.
- - - - - -
Is this really Cohan's alter ego, a paid troll, a sycophant, or a member of a mean spirited cabal ?
Alternatively, he could just be someone disappointed with the outcome (in 2007) of the case. Such people are quite happy with Cohan's book.
First Nifong, then Cline, now a "DA [candidate] that embodies [Durham's] up-tempo zeal".
It's really difficult to take the Indy's endorsements seriously.
I don't know about "Charles Rector", but I have seen a lot of pictures of Cohan, as well as KC. To paraphrase the immortal words of Will Smith in "Men in Black", KC is half the man Cohan is...
Charles Rector,
Your comment here and your Amazon review of Cohan's book are both ridiculous. Go home and inform yourself with the wealth of material about this case in the public domain, then try again.
"charles rector" read his posts they are a prime example of a truly hateful human being.
At least we know where North Carolina "Progressives" stand when it comes to prosecutorial misconduct: they support it unconditionally.
Since Progressives control most of the governing apparati in this country, as well as the "commanding heights" of education and the media, should we be surprised that police and prosecutorial misconduct are not considered important by our so-called leaders?
Brian Aus was endorsed by Durham's country club conservative political action committee, the Friends of Durham, but not the liberal groups, who endorsed a long time loyal Nifong and Cline assistant. Unusual for the Independent to agree with the Friends, but I think that the DA office could use a defense attorney for once.
I went to a Barnes and Noble store Monday. There were SEVEN copies of Cohan's book in the Sports section.
Trial Junkie
Is Charles Rector a Communist?
Post a Comment