Author William D. Cohan recently departed a columnist’s position at Bloomberg View for one at
Huffington
Post (which generally does not pay its columnists). Cohan then used his first
HuffPost piece to
lash
out at the free speech rights of his critics.
Huffington Post also
provided
what likely will be Cohan’s final promotional appearance for his book. As
with each of his interviewers other than WUNC’s Frank Stasio, the
HuffPost Live asked no meaningful
questions about Cohan’s revisionist thesis. Cohan, even so, came across as
noticeably more ill-tempered than in his initial interviews about the book; at
times, he seemed almost unhinged when talking about his critics and
(especially) the defense attorneys.
Cohan, Unhinged
Cohan was asked who had suffered the most in the case. The
answer supplied by the passionate Nifong apologist would come as little
surprise. But then the author seemed to lose touch with reality.
COHAN at 13.30: “So you ask who, who came out the worst in all of
this, who suffered the most: I think, obviously, Mike Nifong, the prosecutor,
suffered the most. He’s the only one who spent any time in jail, he spent a day
in jail. He lost his job, he was disbarred as a lawyer. He filed for personal
bankruptcy. I mean, there are—of course, the defense attorneys would say, ‘That’s
not good enough for him, that’s too good for him, and he should be, you know .
. .’ They won’t be happy until he’s literally dead in the ground. And they’re
doing everything they can to try to put him there!”
Here is a
link to the audio:
Incredibly, the HuffPost
host made no comment, no request for substantiation, as her guest made this
wild assertion.
Since the criminal contempt trial, the defense attorneys
have had no dealings with Nifong. The idea that they’re “doing everything they
can” now to place him “literally dead in the ground” is nothing short of
bizarre.
It should go without saying that while Cohan offers such a
crazy claim, he never even tried to interview any of the attorneys he now
claims want Nifong “literally dead.” So how he reached this determination about
their thoughts must remain a mystery.
Seligmann, Finnerty, and the Party
Early in the interview, Cohan offered what appears to be a new description of the
party.
COHAN at 1.53: “In this situation, you had three students, accused of sexual
assault, and rape, after all day of
partying, and drinking, when they thought it would be a great idea to
invite strippers to their house, off
campus.” [emphases added]
By this point, it’s beyond clear that Cohan simply doesn’t
know very much about the topic on which he wrote. But could he actually now
have come to believe that Reade
Seligmann and Collin Finnerty lived with the three captains? That they were at
the house “all day” during the day of the party? That strippers were invited to
“their” house? His statement makes no sense otherwise.
The Nifong Apologist
The host asked, without providing specifics, if Cohan had a response to criticisms that the book sought to rehabilitate Nifong:
COHAN at 3.06: “I really find it humorous [at this stage in the video, Cohan looks
anything but amused] and counterintuitive . . . To be criticized for
talking to one of the principal players in this drama, no pun intended, the
prosecutor, Mike Nifong, who brought this action, [voice rising] to be criticized for actually giving him a chance to
tell his story, by other journalists who criticize me—many other journalists [voice rising again] have criticized me
for allowing Mike Nifong to have a microphone!”
Given that a bit later in the interview, Cohan would lament
Nifong’s suffering, present him as the major victim in the case, and wildly
claim that defense attorneys were trying to leave him “literally dead in the
ground,” the denial about his status as a Nifong apologist rings a bit hollow.
Nothing Cohan has said or done at any point in his publicity
tour has refuted this criticism.
Math Lessons from William D. Cohan
COHAN at 4.00: “So you’ve got a 620-page book, 600 pages of which
are incredibly critical of everything Mike Nifong did along the way, and 20
pages of it are Mike Nifong explaining why he did what he did, and also to some
extent admitting many of the things his critics ascribe to him, and basically
saying if he could have done it differently, he probably would have, and yet
also defending many of his actions!”
I addressed this
very
strange argument previously. At this point, Cohan’s repeating the assertion
suggests either that he hasn’t read his own book or he possesses an almost
casual willingness to make demonstrably false statements.
Cohan and His Enemies
COHAN at 4.22: [
increasingly
passionate as he proceeds] To somehow ascribe to me motives, as if I were
trying to rewrite this story [
recoils, as
if horrified], or to give Mike Nifong a platform he doesn’t deserve, to me
is so ridiculous, and so absurd, that I was absolutely—I wasn’t shocked by it, but
I couldn’t believe that people who consider themselves to be professional,
responsible journalists today, and who have gotten space in some of our most
well-respected publications like the
New
Republic [Stuart], and
Commentary [me],
and the
Wall Street Journal [
Dorothy
Rabinowitz], to make their, you know, vitriolic cases against me. One of
their main criticisms would be that I gave air time to Mike Nifong and Crystal
Mangum, two of the principal uh, uh, actors in this drama, is
patently absurd.
”
Cohan has already made clear that whether his critics
deserve free-speech protections is an open question. The criticism that Cohan
gave “air time” to Nifong and Mangum appeared nowhere in any of the reviews
that Cohan mentioned.
Notice that amidst his self-professed horror, Cohan nowhere in
the interview addresses the actual criticisms of his book. At this point, I
think it’s fair to say that his silence regarding the substantive critiques
speaks volumes.
Proper Procedures for Prosecutors
The host clearly knew very little about the case. But she
did know that Nifong was disbarred, and six minutes into the interview, she
tried to get Cohan to explain precisely what Nifong did. The guest wasn’t
interested.
COHAN at 5.51: “[Nifong] was disbarred by the State Bar, . . . then he was found in contempt of court and spent that 24 hours in jail . . . all for doing what prosecutors are supposed to do: which
is, if they believe a crime was committed . . . You know, and prosecutors can
believe a crime is committed for any number of different reasons—they believe
the witness, they believe the police investigation, they looked at, you know,
the documentary evidence and the DNA evidence, they talked to the nurse that
examined Crystal Mangum on the night this supposed, uh, felony was committed.
For whatever reasons that he believed a crime was committed, his job as a
prosecutor is to take that evidence . . . forth into a trial.”
It’s terrifying that Cohan believes that a prosecutor who
lies to a judge, withholds exculpatory evidence, violates ethical guidelines
regarding public statements amidst an election campaign, and orders the police
to run a photo array that violates their own guidelines was just “doing what
prosecutors are supposed to do.”
Beyond that point, take a look at the remainder of Cohan’s
statements and apply it to this case. Nifong first made his public statements
that he had come to “believe a crime was committed” early in the afternoon of
27 March 2006. At that point, he hadn’t spoken to the witness, the police
investigation had uncovered nothing, he hadn’t looked at the documentary
evidence, there was no DNA evidence, and he hadn’t talked to the nurse that
examined Crystal Mangum on the night this supposed felony was committed.
But don’t take my word for it. Here’s Cohan’s protagonist,
Mike Nifong, admitting as much during the ethics hearing.
So is it Cohan’s conclusion that a prosecutor can “believe”
a crime occurred, and thus take a case to trial, for any reason at all?
The Nifong Record
COHAN at 6.58: “Well, this was a situation in which this
prosecutor was not allowed to bring
this evidence to a trial. By the way, this was a guy who had been in the Durham
DA’s office for 28 years, and before this he was generally thoroughly
well-regarded as a very strong prosecutor . . .”
At no point in a 15-minute interview did Cohan ever say that
Mike Nifong made ethically improper public statements in the hopes of
bolstering his election campaign, or that Mike Nifong improperly withheld
exculpatory DNA evidence, or that Mike Nifong lied in open court to a judge.
Instead, he said that Nifong made unspecified “mistakes.”
Enemies of the “Truth”
COHAN at 8.57: “I dug up as much as I could that raised some
serious questions about what happened. Of course, any time you say this,
there’s an established narrative out there—there’s an established narrative out
there that the people are very, very wedded to (the parents of the kids, the
kids themselves [he’s describing here people in their late 20s or early 30s],
their attorneys, and their powerful allies in the media) who don’t want anybody
bringing this up, and would go to whatever length they could—for them, this is
a war. This is a war that began in 2006, and it’s going to continue until, uh,
you know, until it can’t continue anymore. Until all the principal people are
no longer alive! And by me taking an objective look at what happened, seven or
eight years after it happened, it apparently, you know, something that they’re
having a real trouble dealing with.”
Cohan might, at some point, want to consult a dictionary to
determine the meaning of “objective.”
That said, consider the oddity of Cohan’s first sentence. With
regards to the criminal case, the only thing that Cohan “dug up” was the
revelation that as his ethical misdeeds were exposed,
Nifong
confined his reading to the New York
Times. None of his lengthy
interviews with Nifong brought any new facts about the criminal case. His
shorter jailhouse chat with murderess Crystal Mangum did dig up two new items,
but both (that medical personnel had to remove wooden shards from her, that
Reade Seligmann carried her to the car) were demonstrably false.
Has Cohan now conceded that all that his book “dug up” about
the criminal case was precisely . . . nothing?
Media Expert
COHAN at 3.20: “The job of the investigative reporter is to go
back to Ground Zero of the story, accumulate all the information that he
possibly can, all the documentary evidence, and talk to as many people as
possible who would talk to him.”
Author Cohan fulfilled the task of seeking to “talk to as many
people as possible who would talk to him” by not seeking to
talk to (among many others): any of the defense attorneys, any of the senior
prosecutors in the AG’s office, the Bar prosecutors, Nifong’s primary campaign
manager, the DHC chair and members, Judge Smith, the criminal contempt
prosecutor, and (it appears) 43 of the 44 unindicted members of the 2006 lacrosse
team.
It would seem, therefore, that Cohan failed the “job of the
investigative reporter,” at least as he defines it.
“Rush to Judgment”
The host—who at several points in the interview seemed a bit
startled by the passion that Cohan brought both to his defense of Nifong and to
his attack on the falsely accused players—noted that from the standpoint of the
falsely accused, there was a rush to judgment. Cohan responded:
COHAN at 12.17: “Everybody rushed to judgment, including the
prosecutor, Mike Nifong. But he did, you know, believe that a rape had
occurred, and he was going to make it his duty to bring it to a court of law,
which is his job, to either prove it or not prove it.”
If it’s possible to get beyond Cohan’s claim that the
defense attorneys want Nifong “literally dead,” this was clearly the oddest
statement of the interview. If, as Cohan now admits, Nifong “rushed to
judgment,” how, possibly, could it have been proper for him to have sought
charges based on his rush to judgment? That question, unsurprisingly, was one
that Cohan showed no interest in answering.
Contempt for the Falsely
Accused
COHAN at 12.36: “Uh, you know, the kids, from their point of view—I
mean, people are accused of crimes, you know, all the time. Uh, either they did
them, or they didn’t do them. Either they could be proved in a court of law
they did them, or they didn’t do them, and you know, there are plenty of cases
where there are people who are wrongfully convicted [
like Darryl Howard], who spend, you
know, 18, 20 years in prison [
like Darryl Howard], and get out
based on new evidence, or new DNA evidence [
like Darryl Howard], and they get,
you know, whatever, $20,000 a year for their pain and suffering. I mean, these
three kids didn’t spend a day in jail, there was no trial, and they ended up
with $20 million each. [
No, they didn’t.] This party cost
Duke $100 million, all told, with legal fees and settlements, etc.” [
No, it didn’t.]
The Attorney General
COHAN at 8.35: “There was a secret investigation done by the state
attorney general [
no criminal investigation in North Carolina is conducted in the open], who declared them
innocent
at the end of that 4-month investigation, and he won’t be interviewed about
it [
untrue: Roy Cooper did a press
conference, and then was interviewed by Lesley Stahl], and he won’t allow
his investigatory filed to be viewed [
because it’s the law] . . .
”
COHAN at 14.01: “We’ll never know what really happened . . . The
State AG won’t open his investigatory files. I have sued in North Carolina to
force him to open those files. I’m sure I’ll lose, and he won’t have to.”
I hope that representatives of the North Carolina
attorney general’s office take notice of this comment, which essentially
features plaintiff Cohan admitting that he has filed a frivolous lawsuit.
Cohan’s Publicity Tour Is (Literally) Cut Off
COHAN at 14.22: “This is just sort of one of those incredible
anomalies of justice that’s occurred in our society, that if you even have the
temerity to talk about it, you get, you know, eviscerated by—”
At that point, the host appeared to have had enough with Cohan’s pity
party, cut the author off, and ended the interview.
Due Process and False Charges
Cohan also offered his typically bizarre interpretation of
the legal system, suggesting that even though the prosecutors from the AG’s
office and the defense attorneys both believed the players were innocent, they
nonetheless should have faced a trial:
COHAN at 7.12: “In our system of jurisprudence, the prosecutor
brings cases before the jury, the people decide whether he’s right or he’s
wrong, the people are not guilty or guilty, and that’s the way the system
works. Here was a case—whether these kids were not guilty or guilty, they were
ultimately declared innocent by the state attorney general. Our justice system
was subverted in this case. And I think that is the most profound uh, uh action
to come out of this whole incident. That our system of justice was subverted by
very clever, deep-pocketed defense attorneys who exploited every mistake that
the prosecution made and that the principal witness made.”
A good response to this basic misunderstanding of our legal
system came from one of these “deep-pocketed defense attorneys,” Brad Bannon,
during the Nifong ethics hearing:
Needless to say, this was another section of Bannon’s
testimony that
never
found its way into Cohan’s book.