Duff Wilson continued his slanted coverage of the case right up until the end. Covering an unprecedented event""the stripping of a sitting DAs law license for misconduct in his highest-profile case ever""that culminated with a dramatic, eloquent, and extemporaneous address by Disciplinary Hearing Commission chairman Lane Williamson, who was the first person quoted in Wilsons article?
Nifong attorney David Freedman.
Who was the second person quoted?
Nifongs wife, Cy Gurney.
Then, almost as an afterthought, Wilson got around to Chairman Williamsons remarks. In his statement, Williamson twice termed the case a "fiasco"""a comment that appropriately led the N&O, AP, and the Chronicle stories on the days events.
The quote never appeared in Wilsons article.
What did Wilson quote?
We had a prosecutor who was faced with a very unusual situation in which the confluence of his self-interest collided with a very volatile mix of race, sex and class," Mr. Williamson said of the media spectacle that accompanied the case in which a black woman who worked as a stripper accused three white lacrosse players.
For good measure, Wilson closed by misidentifying the attorney who delivered the closing argument for the State Bar. His name is Doug Brocker, not (as Wilson wrote) Doug Brock. Since Wilson spent so much time around the defense table at the hearing, perhaps he didnt learn the name of the man who cross-examined Nifong.
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Brockers closing was a masterful performance""a highly organized summary of the case complete with visuals outlining Nifongs myriad, mutually contradictory, excuses on why he didnt turn over the exculpatory DNA evidence. Brockers PowerPoint slide with headshots of Nifongs various media appearances was particularly effective.
He also delivered one of the best lines of the entire case, describing Nifong as a "minister of injustice."
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Even for those who have followed the case closely, many new facts emerged from the hearing. A partial list:
The language in the non-testimonial order stating that the DNA tests would exonerate the innocent was written not by Nifong or his office but by Sgt. Mark Gottlieb.
On March 27, the first business day after he had assumed personal control of the investigation of the case, Nifong met with Gottlieb and Ben Himan. After the two summarized the case, with its many holes, Nifong said, "You know, were fucked."
According to his calendar, Nifong nonetheless had already scheduled interviews with the state and national media almost all the afternoon of March 27, in which he began his defamatory pre-primary publicity barrage.
Nifong sought indictments against Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty without watching the video presentation in which Crystal Mangum "identified" them""and probably without, he conceded, even reading the transcript of this presentation.
Nifong sought an indictment against Reade Seligmann without even knowing whether Seligmann attended the party. The DAs overburdened concerns from Nifng.
In his deposition to the Bar, Gottlieb claimed that Nifong and Meehan went over the May 12 report line by line. Nifong said he never read the report.
The chief staffer for NCs Innocence Inquiry Commission was willing to testify in Nifongs defense.
One of Nifongs predecessors as Durham DA, now-retired judge Anthony Brannon, openly admitted that he did his best to refrain from handing over discovery, of any type, to defense lawyers.
Two Durham judges, Marsha Morey and Elaine Bushfan, declared under oath that a man soon to be disciplined on 27 matters, many of them for fraud, deceit, and misrepresentation, has a reputation for truthfulness in Durham.
In his Friday testimony, Nifong eight times referred to Mangum as the victim.
According to Nifong, his behavior in this case was typical; he rarely reads files. Even Himan was outraged by the decision to ahead with indictments.But Nifong wouldn't care,
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Steven D. Michael, president of the North Carolina State Bar, issued the following statement on Nifongs disbarment:
I am satisfied that justice was done in the Nifong case and am proud to say that our system of self-regulation worked well. Mr. Nifong received a fair trial. All interested parties - but especially the citizens of North Carolina - were finally able to see all the evidence relating to this extremely unfortunate case of professional misconduct. . I was very impressed with the effective and thoroughly professional presentation made by the State Bars lawyers, Katherine Jean, Doug Brocker and Carmen Hoyme. I also thought Mr. Nifong was well represented. . The members of the DHCs Hearing Committee deserve thanks and commendation as well. They presided over a very difficult case in a fair and extremely competent fashion. . In my experience, misconduct of the sort Mr. Nifong engaged in is very rare and not at all typical of prosecutors in our state. We deeply regret the serious harm caused to these young men and their families. We hope the decision today will lessen the likelihood that anything like this will happen again. . The Bars strong response to this situation made clear that the ethical rules restricting pretrial public comment and requiring prosecutors to turn over exculpatory evidence will be strictly enforced. Those rules are important because they ensure the fundamental right to a fair trial that every citizen is guaranteed in our constitution, although these days with Bush, Cheney and his trolls tampering with it, who really knows how long these guarantees will stay in place, oh well thats my opinion
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