http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/more/06/22/duke.lacrosse.ap/index.html
Can the accused get this money back if they were falsely accused?
Can the accused get this money back if they were falsely accused?
Paladin said:http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/more/06/22/duke.lacrosse.ap/index.html
Can the accused get this money back if they were falsely accused?
jttnewguy said:I have a news flash for you...prosecutors don't start cases on their own, they only respond to what witnesses and victims tell them. If a woman tells the police that she was gang-raped, the police and the DA are required by law to open an investigation. If the investigation determines that there is "probable cause" for the charges, they're required to file charges.
Keep in mind that in this case the investigation was severely limited by the fact that the lacrosse players made the strange (and rather immature) decision to refuse as a team to cooperate with the police. If someone on the team had spoken with the police and explained their side of the story, it's entirely possible that the inconsistencies would have come out much sooner, and charges might never have been filed. So a lot of this was self-inflicted, because by banding together and remaining silent, the players essentially forced a grand jury to rely on nothing other than the testimony of the victim. If the victim testifies under oath that it happened, and the only other witnesses to the crime (the team members) all immediately hire lawyers and refuse to cooperate, you tell me what the DA (and the members of the grand jury) are supposed to do?
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Remember, the DA is not the judge and he is not the jury. Remember also that there are 2 sides to every story; even serial killers have their excuses and their alibi witnesses and their sleazy defense lawyers who'll try to twist the facts around. If DA's went around refusing to file charges every time some witnesses contradicted each other, then very few cases would ever be filed and a lot of guilty people would go free.
In the end, it's not the DA's job to decide who's telling the truth, especially when none of the eyewitnesses to the crime will cooperate. That's the jury's job at trial. After all, the whole point of a trial is to sort out the truth when people tell different stories. The DA's role is to put the victim on the stand and let her tell her story; the defense lawyer's role is to present witnesses and evidence that point to innocence; and it's the jury's role to decide who to believe.
The other way to think about this is to flip it around. If you expect DA's to start sitting in judgement and determine, before a trial, who is telling the truth and who isn't, then why have trials at all? If DA's are so good at figuring out cases before trial, why would we ever need judges and juries?
So, you need to think twice before attacking someone for being corrupt when they're doing the job that the law requires them to do.
jttnewguy said:(continued, apparently the post was too long)
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while Scott Peterson was convicted in a case that was pretty weak (whether you personally believe he was guilty or not, the evidence in the case was a little on the marginal side and far, far less than the evidence of OJs guilt). Does that mean that the Scott Peterson case should not have been prosecuted? Of course not, it was a murder case, and you go with the evidence that you have.
Now, Im not saying that Nifong has done everything correctly. As I said, I have not read everything (even if you believe it), and I do not know the particular standards in North Carolina.
But my point is that there's another explanation for everything he has done, and we shouldn't jump so quickly to conclusions of corruption based on what we read on the Internet, especially when, based on my experience, his hands are somewhat (not completely but certainly somewhat) tied by what the victim has told him. He is not a man living alone on an island, free to do whatever he pleases. He is part of a machinery of laws, procedures and standards that were put into motion not by him, but by a victim who told the police that she was raped. Whether the victim was lying or not, only time will tell.
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jttnewguy said:Sherlockmom, I almost dont know where to begin with my response.
First of all, I will willingly and openly admit that I havent followed this case as closely as some members on this message board. Im not as fascinated by this case as some members, as evidenced by the fact that Ive avoided writing even a single post in this thread (or its predecessors) until today.
The second thing I will say is that I had thought that this message board was open to all members to voice their opinions. I was not aware that the only people who are permitted to post without being personally attacked (including by moderators) are those who consider themselves to be "well informed." I think this is silly, since I would have thought that we would want more participation and not less. Moreover, once we start comparing who knows what, and thus who can post and who cant, were setting up a standard that few of the members here can actually meet in view of many of the posts Ive seen. But it is especially silly for reasons that I will elaborate upon in more detail shortly.
You were not personally attacked. Its a case with many twists and turns and one would think you would want to familiarlize yourself with them before you began posting about a case that you, admittedly, knew nothing about.
The rest of of your post just sort of blurred, but if you feel "attacked" in the future, please hit the alert button and I'll be glad to help you out!!
Not necessarily. He could simply be stringing it along to get some name recognition, then drop the charges/announce the accuser has backed out (apparently she and her kids have disappeared) and then use the high profile/cred to try and angle for running for a political office or consulting job elsewhere.mssheila said:I try not to post much in this thread because I do not understand this case at all. I mean, it makes absolutely NO SENSE to me whatsoever. I cannot understand how Nifong has not dropped it yet.
The only thing I can even imagine is that the prosecutor is holding something back. But how he could possibly keep the secret, and not include that in the discovery? Is that even possible? I guess I just can't imagine that he doesn't have to turn his 'evidence' over.
Going back to when he refused to hook one of them (Evans, I think) to a lie detector. He refused to take exculpatory evidence from the boys. I just can't make heads or tails of it at all. I can't imagine either, that a DA would keep this up, with all the public pressure. It tells me that he MUST have SOMETHING.![]()
mssheila said:I try not to post much in this thread because I do not understand this case at all. I mean, it makes absolutely NO SENSE to me whatsoever. I cannot understand how Nifong has not dropped it yet.
The only thing I can even imagine is that the prosecutor is holding something back. But how he could possibly keep the secret, and not include that in the discovery? Is that even possible? I guess I just can't imagine that he doesn't have to turn his 'evidence' over.
Going back to when he refused to hook one of them (Evans, I think) to a lie detector. He refused to take exculpatory evidence from the boys. I just can't make heads or tails of it at all. I can't imagine either, that a DA would keep this up, with all the public pressure. It tells me that he MUST have SOMETHING.![]()
I've been waiting for him to make the announcement that the AV will not testify so he has to drop the charges. That's what I predict he will do. Not only to save face, but won't that prevent the boy's from being able to sue the AV in a civil court?BillyGoatGruff said:Not necessarily. He could simply be stringing it along to get some name recognition, then drop the charges/announce the accuser has backed out (apparently she and her kids have disappeared) and then use the high profile/cred to try and angle for running for a political office or consulting job elsewhere.
mssheila said:I've been waiting for him to make the announcement that the AV will not testify so he has to drop the charges. That's what I predict he will do. Not only to save face, but won't that prevent the boy's from being able to sue the AV in a civil court?
Actually, no.mssheila said:I've been waiting for him to make the announcement that the AV will not testify so he has to drop the charges. That's what I predict he will do. Not only to save face, but won't that prevent the boy's from being able to sue the AV in a civil court?
BillyGoatGruff said:Actually, no.
I have to wonder what's screwing Nifong up at home to make him go out of his way to antagonize the Duke Alumni. Its not a move someone in a politically charged career like DA would make willingly.