Transcript, Nancy Grace News
Should DA Nifong Stay on Duke Rape Case?
Aired June 15, 2006 - 20:00:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE
IN ITS FINAL FORM AND
MAY BE UPDATED.
JANE VELEZ-MITCHELL, GUEST HOST: Tonight, the
latest developments in the Duke rape investigation,
critics and defense attorneys calling for District
Attorney Mike Nifong to get off the case. Did
public remarks by Nifong contradict the actual
facts of the case?
Also tonight, day three in the manhunt for a Reno
fugitive millionaire. Did suspect Darren Mack
stop for coffee, coffee between the murder of
his wife and the shooting of a judge? We`ll explain.
And tonight, we are taking your calls. But first
tonight, to the Duke rape investigation.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I`ve never in my entire life
had a prosecutor refuse to look at evidence that
I was willing to show him. I want to see everything
he`s got, and my experience is, prosecutors want
to see everything I have.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: I`m Jane Velez-Mitchell, in for
Nancy Grace tonight. Durham District Attorney
Mike Nifong under attack in the Duke rape investigation.
Multiple public filings by the defense claim DA
Nifong`s public comments contradict the facts
of the case, in which three Duke lacrosse players
are charged with the rape of an exotic dancer
at a party back in March.
For the very latest on all these new developments,
let`s go straight out to Kevin Miller, reporter
with WPTF radio. He has been covering this case
from the very start. Kevin, bring us up to date.
What`s the latest?
KEVIN MILLER, WPTF RADIO: Jane, you would describe
under fire, perhaps under siege would better remark
-- would be the better remark for District Attorney
Mike Nifong. These were papers that were filed
last week by Kirk Osborne (ph) and Earnest Connor
(ph), attorneys for Reade Seligmann, saying that,
Look, there are inconsistencies in this case that
we`ve heard publicly from Mike Nifong that don`t
add up to the facts of the case, most notably
that Kim Roberts Pittman (ph), the second dancer,
initially said that the victim-accuser`s statements
that she was raped were a crock, that the nurse
was not certified as a rape nurse, that she was
a nurse in training, that the physical trauma
described by Mike Nifong was not found by the
physician who examined the victim-accuser. In
fact, the only evidence of any physical trauma
was a laceration on her heel and a cut on her
knee.
And again, this really plays into the fact that
there possibly could be a write-in candidate to
challenge him in the November election here in
Durham.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And the reaction in Durham is
what tonight?
MILLER: Well, the defense team has done a marvelous
job of pretty much controlling the airwaves, controlling
thee press, and getting their message out that
the victim-accuser, the second dancer -- every
facet of this case lacks credibility, and most
folks want this case to go away.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And I understand that the prosecutor
can`t even speak up now because once the indictments
are handed down and it`s formal charges, he by
law has to keep quiet.
MILLER: Right. He is bound under North Carolina
law not to talk about this case once there have
been indictments. There have been three so far.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right. Well, let`s talk about
some of the amazing developments you`ve brought
up, and let`s break it down. It`s very complicated,
folks, but this is important. The devil is really
in the details with this case. So I have a full-screen
graphic we`re going to throw up of exactly the
issues at hand. They are condoms, struggle, team
cooperation, the 911 call, and the rape exam.
Now, let us go to defense attorney Richard Herman,
who`s been studying all this, and talk about these
alleged inconsistencies. First of all, let me
ask you about this one. The prosecutor reportedly
said that this accuser was hit, kicked and strangled,
she was grabbed from behind, she had to struggle
in order to breathe. But according to the defense,
they`re now saying the accuser told the nurse
that very night after the incident that she was
not choked, that the medical staff reportedly
saw no tenderness to her neck, according to the
defense, the nurse noted that her head and neck
were normal. How do you explain that kind of inconsistency?
RICHARD HERMAN, DEFENSE ATTORNEY: Jane, Nifong
is making up the facts to fit some sort of portfolio
here. He`s making up the facts of this case! It`s
outrageous! I am calling for a criminal investigation
of Nifong by the U.S. attorney`s office in Durham!
This is outrageous! Everything he said in those
72 interviews have been proven to be false, blatant,
black and white, not even a close call here.
And the most telling is the eyewitness who was
with the alleged accuser the entire night, except
for maybe five minutes, and she said it`s a bunch
of crock, that coupled with the medical examination
that was done that very night. There is no case
here. Zero case!
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Before we get carried away --
and we do not know what happened that night, and
nobody`s trying to pre-judge, but there are inconsistencies
all over the place. Now, you`ve heard the defense
say that the medical team found no evidence of
head injury. Let`s hear what the accuser`s father
said he saw with his own eyes.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
NANCY GRACE, HOST: You said you saw bruises on
her face. Where were they?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Right up on the eyes and the
jaw (INAUDIBLE)
GRACE: And where was the scratch on her arm?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It was on her right arm, I
believe (INAUDIBLE) And she didn`t tell me a lot
of the details, but she did tell me that three
boys had raped her. And I asked her where was
it at, where did it happen, and she said at that
house.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Former prosecutor Joanne Musick,
is this a case perhaps where the defense can kind
of cherry-pick different facts and line them up
with other comments and paint a picture of inconsistencies
that if we had all the evidence and we could look
at all the paperwork that they have, we might
say, Well, yes, there are some inconsistencies
here because we`re dealing with human beings,
but it`s not like there`s no case?
JOANNE MUSICK, FORMER PROSECUTOR: There`s always
going to be inconsistencies with any case. What
we need to know are all of the facts, and clearly,
we do not know all of those yet. Some things may
have been misstated in the press, either because
the prosecutor was not aware of all the facts
of this case, as he was initially talking to the
media, making statements, but as he`s become more
familiar with the case, I`m sure that he would
be dismissing this case if he had no evidence.
We certainly have a complainant willing to come
forward, willing to state her position, and she
indicates that she`s been raped. The prosecutor
needs to zealously prosecute that case.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And former head of the FBI Houston
bureau Don Clark, how much of this is simply that
the defense has hired some excellent, excellent
defense attorneys, they will leave absolutely
no stone unturned? Some people have compared this
to the Kobe Bryant case, where the defense team
was so high-powered, they just outplayed the prosecution
at every step.
DON CLARK, FORMER HEAD OF FBI HOUSTON BUREAU:
Jane, it`s all about the defense, that they`re
going to make every effort that they can to discredit
the prosecution in this case. And the issue in
this case is the evidence. And whether we talk
about something that someone heard or someone
said, that doesn`t matter. It`s the evidence that
they`re going to be able -- have to link together
to be able to take to a jury. And anything I think
that the defense can find to discredit that, certainly,
they are going to use it.
Now, one thing that happens, if the prosecution
does say something and the defense gets their
hands on it, then as an investigator, now you`ve
got to start trying to work through that to make
sure that that fits into your evidence scheme
that you`re going to present to a jury, so when
they see it, they will see all the facts. And
until then, we`re just going to be talking about
one way or the other here.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: You know what strikes me, former
prosecutor Joanne Musick, is that on this show,
on all shows that deal with crime, we always complain,
Why aren`t they telling us more, Why don`t they
hold a news conference, Why don`t they talk to
us? Well, isn`t this an example of what can happen
when the prosecution talks? They kind of box themselves
into a corner.
MUSICK: Absolutely. Whether it`s the defense
or the prosecution doing the talking, they make
-- they have the potential to make a misstatement,
and then they`re trapped into it and they`re crucified
for it. And it can be simply a misstatement. This
is a good reason why the prosecutor should not
be out in the media, making statements about his
case until he is very thoroughly familiar with
the case and is permitted to do so in the courtroom.
We have to remember what the prosecutor says is
not evidence. It`s not fact. It is simply his
observations of the case. The facts will come
out in the courtroom.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And Joanne, complicating all
of this is the fact that this accuser may have
been intoxicated or drugged, perhaps by someone
else that night.
Let`s listen to the 911 call that came in that
night.
(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: This is going to wind up being
a 24-hour hold. She`s 10-56 and unconscious (INAUDIBLE)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: 10-4. You need a medical
truck (INAUDIBLE)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: She`s breathing, appears to
be fine. She`s not in distress. She`s just passed
out drunk.
(END AUDIO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Defense attorney Richard Herman,
complicating this entire issue now, if she was
intoxicated, as that 911 call indicated -- and
we`re not saying she got herself drunk, there`s
been the possibility raised that perhaps she was
subjected to a date rape drug or something else
-- that also makes it difficult because then how
can we trust what she said? Can she have spotty
recollections that night when she was talking
to the nurse? That sort of thing.
HERMAN: Jane, there`s no toxicology to support
any claim of a date rape drug. And the reason
the defense attorneys are going out in the press
is because when Nifong did his 72 interviews prior
to the indictments, he laid out what his case
was. All the defense attorneys are doing is saying,
Everything Nifong told the public why he`s bringing
this case, is not true. It`s all lies.
Now, this woman had DNA -- semen in her from
another -- other people. No one -- there`s no
DNA from this alleged rape, in this 30-minute
attack that supposedly took place. There`s time-stamped
photos. This case goes nowhere, Jane. This prosecutor
has an obligation, has an ethical obligation to
dismiss this case. He cannot go forward with it.
He`s got no foundation to bring it. There is no
evidence...
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Well, you know...
HERMAN: ... and I challenge anybody to show me,
what is the evidence in this case?
VELEZ-MITCHELL: It sounds like they should hire
you to be the defense attorney. You`re very passionate
about this.
But let me say something about those time-stamped
photos. And please, anybody in the panel disagree
with me. I know, my camera, the time stamp isn`t
correct. I haven`t set it properly in a long time.
So I can take photos, but that time stamp might
not be correct. And I`ve seen that in other cases
where they say, We have a time-stamped photo,
and it turns out that the time stamp wasn`t properly
set.
So I`m not saying that it was or wasn`t. All
I`m saying is, again, the devil`s in the details.
There are a lot of nuances here. Everybody is
seeing the same evidence and analyzing it differently.
You raised a very important point, Richard Herman,
and that is the DNA. And I`d like to ask Dr. Daniel
Spitz, the forensic psychologist -- and pathologist,
rather -- about that.
Let`s analyze the second alleged inconsistency.
I`m reading here because this is details and I
don`t want to get them wrong. The DA on television
reportedly said, quote, "If a condom were
used, then we might expect that there would not
be any DNA evidence recovered from a vaginal swab."
He apparently said that on March 31. But in the
court papers filed, the accuser allegedly told
the nurse right after the incident that no condoms
were used. So what do you make of that inconsistency?
DR. DANIEL SPITZ, FORENSIC PATHOLOGIST: Well,
certainly, it`s an inconsistency, and it gives
the prosecutor some difficulties. If a condom
was used, you may not have DNA. But that appears
not to be the facts of the case, and the prosecutor`s
going to have to acknowledge that because that`s
just the information that came out.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And DNA, of course, is a science
and it`s very specific, and it`s easy to talk
in general terms and possibly get something wrong.
Let`s listen to the father of the accuser talk
about his daughter`s reaction when the DNA results
came back in negative.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
GRACE: You said that the night the DNA results
came out, she cried all night.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: She (INAUDIBLE) cried all
night long. She couldn`t believe it.
GRACE: What is she saying about the fact there
was no DNA?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Well, she felt like they thought
that she was lying and just -- she just couldn`t
take it.
GRACE: Did she describe at all the series of
events that led up to the attack?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: No. She didn`t describe all
of it. A lot of things I learned later that really
-- it really tore me apart.
GRACE: Like what?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Oh, like the broom they used
on her and stuff like that.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right. And I`d like to go
back to Dr. Daniel Spitz because we are talking
about DNA evidence and he is a forensic pathologist.
My understanding, basically, of the DNA is that
the prosecution says the DNA found underneath
a fingernail in the bathroom can be linked to
one of the suspects, and that fingernail was allegedly
from the victim. The defense says that the DNA
proved to be completely inconclusive. The only
material recovered that matched anybody was from
a single male source who wasn`t on the team. So
when you see that kind of evidence, what does
it tell you as a scientist?
SPITZ: Well, there is some DNA under a fingernail.
Now, that`s a questionable sample because of how
it was recovered. And when a sample is recovered
from a wastebasket with other kinds of contaminants
in there, you always have the problem of contamination.
So even if it`s linked to one of the players,
the contamination issue is a serious problem.
The DNA from the vaginal sample does not -- is
not linked to any of these Duke players. It`s,
in fact, linked to somebody else. So that indicates
that this woman did have sex in the recent days
prior to this alleged assault.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: So we are out of time for this
segment, but answer yes or no. Does it sound to
you like a weak case, based on the forensics,
or not?
SPITZ: It`s very weak. There`s no indication
of an assault. There`s really no indication of
any type of sexual contact. So I don`t think this
case is really going anywhere very fast.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And it is so very controversial.
We`ll have more on it in a moment.
Good news in tonight`s "Case Alert."
An Arizona girl missing for 10 years is found
safe in South Carolina. Rebecca Ann Brawn (ph),
now age 12, abducted by her father at just 2 years
old from her Tempe home. Fifty- seven-year-old
Danny Moran was on the most wanted list in Phoenix.
Moran was living in a mobile home with Rebecca
and another woman, who was also arrested. Thankfully
for Rebecca`s mom, a reunion between mother and
daughter is expected soon.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It`s a good feeling, knowing
that, you know, this child is safe and been missing
this long, and this child`s going to be reunited
with her natural mother.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (INAUDIBLE) the Duke lacrosse
rape case had reported 10 years ago that she`d
been sexually assaulted approximately 13 years
ago. I will not comment specifically on either
the facts of the current case or the circumstances
of the previous allegations.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: I`m Jane Velez-Mitchell, filling
in for Nancy Grace. Tonight, we are talking about
the latest developments in the Duke rape investigation.
A few critics, particularly the defense, want
the DA to remove himself from this case, saying
his public comments fly in the face of what the
accuser herself said happened. And of course,
with the DA`s office being an elected position,
politics is playing a role. The DA, Nifong, triumphed
in last month`s primary, but now another potential
challenger has emerged, a county commissioner
named Louis Cheek (ph), and he`s OKed a petition
drive that could land his name on the fall ballot.
Reporter Kevin Miller, tell us about how this
new challenger or potential challenger to the
prosecutor -- how does this relate to the Duke
case? Has politics now totally seeped through
on this case?
MILLER: Jane, you know, as a matter of course,
I would say yes. We had a chance last week with
Nancy to break this story that people around Durham
were actively looking for candidates to go up
against Mike Nifong. And Louis Cheek, I had a
chance to speak with him -- he said to me, basically,
he has no problem with Mike Nifong, but the lacrosse
case is just part of the way he`s handling it,
number one.
Number two, Louis Cheek also told me that he
doesn`t believe he`s the only one that`s being
actively recruited. You could have people that
are pro-prosecution, that think Mike Nifong is
not going quick enough, you could also have people
that are pro-Duke, that want this case to go away,
to get on the ballot. I can explain the process
of how it`s going to work in Durham.
In addition, one thing that`s being left out
about Mike Nifong is he`s a 27-year prosecutor
in the Durham DA`s office. He was appointed by
the governor just a few months ago. The governor
is a former attorney general, a former prosecutor,
so he had a lot of faith and a lot of confidence
in Mike Nifong that gets underreported.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Now, I understand that some of
the people, or at least one of the people supporting
this potential challenger are connected to Duke
University in some way, though the fraternities
and -- so there`s sort of this tie to Duke, possibly.
MILLER: Well, you see that. I mean, Durham is
a small community and Duke`s a big part of it,
so you are going to have people that are -- you
know, with ties to Duke. You do have Mr. Cheek,
who did represent Duke in the past, when he was
involved with a bigger civil firm. Now, in fact,
he has a small civil law firm of about six associates,
and that would kind of cause trouble for him.
He doesn`t have a lot of experience as a prosecutor.
It`s been 25 years since he`s handled criminal
law.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Let`s get a call in. From West
Virginia, Kelly, what is your question?
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Hi, Jane. It`s great to
get to talk to you. My question is, if and when
the three Duke lacrosse players are found to be
innocent, can the accuser be actually be prosecuted
for making false allegations or...
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Excellent question. And let`s
go to defense attorney Richard Herman on that.
HERMAN: Well, Jane, basically, the district attorney
would be the one to have to prosecute the accuser
here. But if you look at Nifong, could he be prosecuted,
or could he be sued by the lacrosse players? That`s
the bigger question. And unfortunately, they cannot
sue him civilly. He has full immunity. But he
might face ethical issues with the grievance committee
and he might lose his bar card.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: When I looked at what happened,
I was appalled. I think that most people in this
community are appalled. I think if Joe Cheshire
weren`t representing one of the people in this
case, he might even admit that he was appalled.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: I`m Jane Velez-Mitchell, sitting
in tonight for Nancy Grace. A Duke lacrosse team
party back in March resulted in three players
being charged with rape and kidnapping. Meantime,
one of the young men charged, Collin Finnerty,
faces another legal situation in Washington, D.C.
-- that area, anyway -- where he was accused of
being part of a fight and yelling a slur regarding
sexual orientation.
Kevin Miller, what`s the very latest in that
D.C.-area case?
MILLER: Well, that case could take precedence
over this one, Jane, and it could impact the ongoing
indictments here in Durham.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right. And you know, we mentioned
that alleged slur. And we don`t know for sure.
He has not been convicted in that D.C.- area case,
so we don`t know. But there was an alleged slur.
Slurs were also a part of this case, as well.
In fact, we have a recording of what`s believed
to be the 911 call, the very first one that came
in from that night. Let`s listen in.
(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)
911 OPERATOR: Durham 911. Where`s your emergency?
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Hi. I don`t know if this
is an emergency or not necessarily, but I`m in
Durham and I was driving down near Duke`s campus.
And it`s me and my black girlfriend. And the guy
-- there`s, like, a white guy by the Duke wall,
and he was just hollered out (DELETED) to me.
And I`m just so angry, I didn`t know who to call!
I don`t know if this is an emergency. They`re
just hanging out by the wall...
911 OPERATOR: (INAUDIBLE)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: ... on Buchanan, off of
Buchanan Street. It`s right in front of 610 Buchanan
Street. And I saw them all come out, like, a big
frat house, and me and my black girlfriend are
walking by, and they called us (DELETED)!
(END AUDIO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Let`s go to our psychiatrist,
Dr. Lisa Weinstock. Now, we don`t know for sure
what happened that night, but one thing that doesn`t
seem very much in dispute is this issue of racial
slurs. A number of people in the neighborhood
reportedly heard them. Does that open a Pandora`s
box? Once you open the door to racial slurs, can
anything happen? Can an equal and opposite reaction
be, Hey, this is war?
DR. LISA WEINSTOCK, PSYCHIATRIST: Well, you know,
it`s hard to know. We know there was this party,
that there was a lot of drinking involved, that
regardless of what happened in terms of the rape,
they had these, you know, female dancers there.
And there may have been a demeaning aspect to
the whole experience, to begin with, which would
then make it more likely that these young men
would sort of fall into this, you know, racial
slur- like pattern. So it`s really hard to know
what the slurs themselves implicate.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: But it certainly could have created
anger, resentment, and even a desire for revenge.
WEINSTOCK: Well, that`s absolutely true. And
so we don`t really know whether the victims, hearing
these kinds of things, were more likely to, you
know, say things that may turn out not to be true.
It`s just such a mystery at this point. But that`s
an excellent point.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: It is. And once you start using
those slurs, you never know where it`s going to
end up. It`s a dangerous combination.
We at Nancy Grace want very much to help, in
our own way, solve unsolved homicides, find missing
people. Tonight, take a look at 34-year- old Sandra
Young from San Francisco, California, Sandra found
murdered in the Bay area December 2, 2005. Any
information on Sandra Young, call the Carole Sund
Carrington Foundation toll-free. The number is
888-813-8389.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I never saw a rape occur.
Everybody knows, I think -- it`s hard for me to
remember who knows what, you know, because the
facts are so simple to me, so elementary, so simple.
The time line, what -- all that stuff that`s
so confusing to everybody, I was there from the
beginning to the end. The only thing I did not
see was the rape, because I was not in the bathroom
at that particular moment.
Everything leading up to it, I was there. Everything
leaving from it, I was there. And, mind you, I
believe I was the only sober person in the place.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And that was the woman who went
with the accuser to that house that night to do
some exotic dancing for the lacrosse team. This
investigation is such a heated and emotional issue,
so many difficult subjects to discuss, so bear
with us. I apologize in advance, but this is rather
graphic.
According to the prosecution, this woman was
allegedly raped vaginally, anally and orally.
But, according to the defense, when she was there
with the nurse, she did not mention all of that.
So let`s go back to Dr. Daniel Spitz, who is
not only a forensic pathologist, but as well a
medical examiner. How can that kind of discrepancy
occur?
SPITZ: Well, you know, it can occur by having
her tell the nurse if that occurred, and it just
doesn`t seem like it did, based on the evidence
that we have. This is a big problem with what
people say and what the evidence shows. And, so
far, forensically, the evidence just doesn`t support
that kind of claim.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: But, former prosecutor Joanne
Musick, when a woman is traumatized and she may
have been intoxicated, for whatever reason, and
she`s at the hospital, is it possible that her
story is going to be jumbled and she won`t remember
all the details, let`s say, until a future time
because she is so traumatized?
MUSICK: Absolutely. The victim is under a tremendous
amount of pressure, shock, disgust, embarrassment,
just a traumatic trauma at that point, and she`s
trying to relay the story as best she can. She
may have relayed details that didn`t end up in
the nurse`s report; she may have not.
You need the chance to reflect clearly on what
happened. You have to remember that, to the victim,
this seemed like an eternity that she was in that
house where she couldn`t get out, if that is,
in fact, what occurred.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: That`s absolutely true. I mean,
when you try to measure time -- and here we are
in the news business, so we have a pretty good
understanding of time. But if somebody asked me
off the cuff, "Well, how long were you in
that coffee shop getting coffee?" I might
say five minutes, and it might have been 17 minutes.
That kind of thing happens all the time. And,
in fact, studies have shown that recollections
are very off.
We have a caller, Deanna from Texas. What is
your question, ma`am?
CALLER: Well, Jane, how are you tonight?
VELEZ-MITCHELL: I`m doing well.
CALLER: Listen, my question has to do, going
back to the DNA, because we`ve talked about it
at several levels, but the broom the father mentioned
that his daughter said was used on her. Has there
been anything said on that subject as to whether
or not DNA was found on the broom?
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Well, let`s go to the reporter
who`s been covering this from the very start,
Kevin Miller. Excellent question, ma`am.
What do you know about -- and, again, very graphic
stuff -- this whole broom aspect?
MILLER: Well, according to statements released
by the defense and in court filings, there was
no mention of a broom being used by the victim-
accuser. And as one person who has interviewed
Mike Nifong when this initially came out, and
getting back to the DNA part, he said that the
DNA was bulletproof and that it was more accurate
in these cases than an eyewitness identification.
That`s why the stress has been on the DNA, and
that`s, when it didn`t come up conclusive in either
DNA trials, there`s been a big swing in momentum
here locally and nationally.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Kevin, you actually talked to
the D.A. who is now at the center of this controversy.
MILLER: Sure.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Do you think that he did a little
too much lip flap, that he was basically jawboning
a little too much before all the facts were in
or not? What`s your sense of it?
MILLER: Boy, that`s a tough call to make, Jane.
He was so convincing, and he was so pure in his
belief in the victim-accuser, and he was so forthright.
It`s amazing, when we talk about Mike Nifong,
because I said, "What about the DNA?"
And then the next day he`s telling publications,
"Well, even if there`s not DNA, perhaps they
used condoms."
It was already -- we were starting to hear these
other theories that were coming out. And the code
of silence -- and if you believe the defense,
Jane, there wasn`t a code of silence. They were
looking out for their clients.
But, I mean, he was so believable. We had him
on for a half an hour on WPTF, and many people
at the time believed him.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Well, Richard Herman, defense
attorney, Kevin has brought up one of the other
inconsistencies that we want to go into here.
The D.A. had said that some of these team players,
or all of them, were sort of creating a stone
wall of silence, that they had more loyalty to
their team than to the community.
But let`s hear, before you answer this question,
what one of the charged students, Dave Evans,
said about his level of cooperation with the authorities.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DAVE EVANS, ACCUSED IN DUKE RAPE CASE: If I can
go back to two months ago when the police first
came to my home, I fully cooperated and have continued
to try to cooperate with them.
When they entered in and started to read the
search warrant, my roommates and I helped them
find evidence for almost an hour and told them
that, if they had any questions, we would gladly
answer them to show that nothing happened that
night.
After that, I went down to the police station
and gave an un-counseled statement, because I
knew that I had done nothing wrong and did not
feel that I needed an attorney. After going through
photos of my teammates and identifying who was
there, I then submitted, perfectly willingly,
DNA samples to the police.
I then turned over my e-mail account, my AIM
account, any kind of information that they could
have to show that I had not communicated in any
way that anything had happened because it did
not happen.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right. Defense attorney Richard
Herman, I know you`re chomping at the bit to weigh
in on this.
HERMAN: Well, Jane, it`s just another lie by
Nifong. All this guy does, he`s a compulsive liar
in this case.
And, you know, the caller called in earlier about
that broom handle. Jane, when they first executed
the first search warrant, they didn`t go to look
for a broom because it was never mentioned by
the accuser. It only came up later on, after the
fact. It really -- I mean, the case has boiled
down to absolutely -- it`s just outrageous what`s
going on here.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: We`ve got Karen from South Carolina.
We want to get in another caller. Karen, your
question.
CALLER: Yes. If the Duke players are found innocent,
do the attorneys think that there will possibly
be a civil case, as in the O.J. Simpson trial?
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right, well, that`s similar,
but maybe not, to another question a caller had.
I`ll let former prosecutor Joanne Musick answer
that.
If there is no criminal case or if, I should
say, these defendants are found not guilty, then
what could happen civilly, if at all?
MUSICK: Well, there can always be a civil lawsuit.
The victim can come forward and file a suit. Her
family can come forward and file a suit. It doesn`t
mean she will prevail. And, you know, that`ll
really depend on how the evidence actually shakes
out in trial.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: You know, I want to ask Dr. Lisa
Weinstock, psychiatrist, how this community can
heal. This has been so divisive. But, in situations
like this, sometimes there is opportunity, there
is opportunity to go from the worst to the best.
What should this community do?
WEINSTOCK: Well, I think one thing that`s going
to help them heal is time and more information.
I think, when this first came out, it was very
polarizing. People immediately went and, you know,
had an opinion either one way or the other.
And, as more facts have come out, or lack thereof,
I think people have had more time to reflect and
think rather than have a gut, instinctual response.
So I think talking, having meetings between different,
you know, groups of people, time, and really,
you know, going over the facts and the information
is really what`s going to lead this community
to heal more than anything else.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: We`re almost out of time. But,
in a sense of spirit, what should the spirit of
the people and the community be at the campus
and around the campus, one of forgiveness and
understanding? Should they try to let the heated
emotions sort of fade away?
WEINSTOCK: Absolutely. I mean, it`s very easy
to make a rushed judgment based on a little bit
of information. I think people need to take a
step back and really wait before they make a decision.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
MIKE NIFONG, DISTRICT ATTORNEY: You know, there
are certain people who told me that the timing
of this could not be better for the election;
that had nothing to do with the timing of this
case. It had nothing to do with anything about
this, other than the fact that what happened here
was one of the worst things that`s happened since
I have become district attorney.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(NEWSBREAK)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: ... saying it`s a Bushmaster
gun, just like this, that Darren Mack used in
his attempt to kill Judge Weller earlier this
week. Now, I`m out here in a safe environment
with (INAUDIBLE) sniper team, and they`re showing
me how to use this gun safely and properly.
These guys resent the fact that people are calling
Mack a sniper. Snipers save lives; they don`t
take lives. Snipers protect people like you and
me. And these are the guys that are going to take
a guy like Mack off the streets.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: I`m Jane Velez-Mitchell, sitting
in for Nancy Grace. The manhunt is still on for
a handsome, millionaire businessman from Nevada
who is now an accused murder; 45-year-old Darren
Mack is still on the lam after allegedly knifing
his estranged wife to death on Monday and then
shooting his family court judge a short time later.
Is he still in Nevada, or has he fled to Northern
California or possibly even out of the country?
There have been tantalizing new hints to his possible
whereabouts.
Let`s go straight out to my friend, Ed Miller,
reporter for "America`s Most Wanted."
Ed, your show now involved in this case. What
is the latest on the track for Mack?
ED MILLER, REPORTER, "AMERICA`S MOST WANTED":
Well, I think you really hit the nail on the head.
The big question is -- you have a millionaire
playboy with lots and lots of money at his disposal
-- did he already leave the country?
There are some indications that he stashed money.
He declared bankruptcy, even though just a short
while ago financial records showed that he had
$10 million and was making $45,000 a month, believe
it or not, $45,000 a month. How can a man declare
bankruptcy all of a sudden? Well, maybe he stashed
some of that cash out of the country; that`s what
many people think.
So he could have slipped out of the country very
easily. He does have this -- it`s not quite a
pilot`s license. It`s a student`s pilot`s license.
And, of course, you know, renting a plane is not
like going to Hertz rental car. It`s kind of a
loosy-goosy business, so he could have rented
a plane and could have escaped.
But that is the key question: Is he here or is
he not?
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And a couple of hours after the
shooting of the judge he turns up -- or evidence
of him turns up in Sacramento at the airport.
A corporate credit card available to Mack is used
at a parking garage. We went on the Internet and
found out, yes, he could have made that drive,
theoretically, from Reno to Sacramento.
So are they focusing their search on that area?
E. MILLER: No. And, you know what, to tell you
exactly how that credit card was used, he used
it for a very short time, you know, to exit an
airport parking lot. So it was like 84 cents or
something, so he was in or out. And, obviously,
the common thinking was, "Well, he ditched
the car there and took another car," but
they looked all over for that silver SUV and they
couldn`t find it anywhere.
So did he use it? Did he get someone else to
use it? Was it designed to throw police off track?
You don`t know. But, definitely, that SUV was
not there.
And they looked through all of those horrible,
grainy surveillance video camera pictures that
I`ve been hounding you folks about, because surveillance
cameras are frequently very bad quality, and the
quality again was so bad they couldn`t tell whether
it was him or Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny.
So that turned out to be a dead end.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right. And another fascinating
angle to this entire story -- and we could possibly
flash up a time line as we discuss this -- of
course, the crimes occurred on Monday.
And apparently, Dennis Myers, news editor of
the "Reno News and Review," Darren Mack,
in between the time he allegedly killed his wife,
Charla, and shot the judge, who thankfully recovered,
stopped for coffee with a friend. Tell us about
this.
Hello, Dennis, can you hear us?
DENNIS MYERS, NEWS EDITOR, "RENO NEWS AND
REVIEW": Can you hear me?
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Yes, well, Dennis. Are you there?
MYERS: Yes.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: OK, yes, can you tell us about
the coffee pit stop, the cup of Joe that Darren
Mack had in between, allegedly, these two crimes?
MYERS: Well, at the time that Mrs. Mack, Charla
Mack, was murdered, there was a family friend
in the house, and there was also the couple`s
child, a toddler. The family friend got the child
out of the house.
And we had been told up to before now that the
family friend had some idea of what was happening
in the house and so got the child out of the house.
But now there`s this story that the family friend
later met up with Darren Mack at a coffee shop
and had the child with him, brought the child
back into Darren Mack`s presence. You know, I
haven`t got that confirmed myself, but it`s a
published report.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: It would be certainly chilling,
if true, because that would strike me as somebody
quite cold-blooded, able to do this, allegedly,
to his wife, then have a cup of Joe with his daughter
and a friend, and then go and allegedly shoot
the judge in the chest from across a river, three
football fields away.
Thankfully, again, the judge out of the woods,
OK, in hiding right now, or under protection.
(CROSSTALK)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Now, I would like to go to our
reporter, Clark Goldband, our NANCY GRACE reporter,
who always has all the facts. The suspect, Darren
Mack, was furious, furious about this bitter divorce.
Tell us about it.
CLARK GOLDBAND, NANCY GRACE PRODUCER: Well, that`s
exactly right, Jane. And the question that people
seem to be asking is: What could have drove someone
to be this upset at someone who`s a family court
judge?
We have the divorce papers right here. And as
you can see, Darren has to pay $10,000 a month
spousal support, $849 a month child support. It
doesn`t stop there, Jane. The first mortgage,
the second mortgage, and then -- listen to this
-- he`s got to pay all the bills for his wife,
including lawn, gas, pool, satellite, insurance,
water, alarm, garbage, pest control, even the
telephone.
So while spousal support, Jane, is tax-deductible,
I don`t think that`s enough of a positive spin
on $10,000 a month.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right. And I would like to
ask Dr. Lisa Weinstock, psychiatrist, can people
snap because of a divorce, or do you think they
have an underlying psychological problem and then,
when something stressful like a divorce occurs,
suddenly these character defects come to the surface?
WEINSTOCK: Absolutely. I mean, there`s no question
that divorce is stressful, even in the most "easy,"
quote, unquote, divorces. And this one sounds
like it was very not easy.
However, I think to snap to this degree reflects
on some underlying psychological problem. This
guy seems like he really has no sense of remorse,
really kind of like character-logically deficient,
in terms of his sense of what his responsibilities
really were.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: All right. Rita in New Jersey,
your question?
CALLER: I know this person was upstairs with
one of the children. I`d like to know, how come
there wasn`t any noise if somebody`s being stabbed
multiple times?
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Interesting. Let`s go to Dennis
Myers. I know that this friend who was asked to
come over had a dog. The dog started barking and
then ran up the stairs covered in blood. So, to
follow up on our viewer`s question, why didn`t
he call the police right then? I mean, a dog appears
covered in blood; the man appears later with his
hand wrapped. Why didn`t he call right away?
MYERS: I don`t know the answer to that. We haven`t
been given information about the acoustics in
the house or so on. And, as for why he didn`t
call the police right away, we don`t know that,
either. Information is being held very closely.
But I want to return to what one of your other
guests said earlier. There`s a real tone of blaming
the victim here, that, because she was being given
$10,000, that this was an extravagant amount.
I have seen their tax returns. That was about
20 percent of their annual income, was what she
was receiving. The fact that she received that
monthly allowance does not mitigate in any way
what was going on, what happened here.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Oh, absolutely. And I don`t think
anybody is trying to blame the victim. We are
trying to ascertain the facts to understand why
people do what they do so that, God willing, we
can prevent people from doing this kind of thing
again.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: He just always had such
a positive mind. For this to have happened, he
had to have been pushed to such an extent, to
such a brink of despair, he felt he was losing
everything.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Absolutely not a violent man.
I`ve known him for 40 years; he was the furthest
thing from a man that would be a violent person.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VELEZ-MITCHELL: But police say Darren Mack has
turned violent. They are hunting for him. They
suspect him of killing his wife and trying to
kill his family court judge in a bitter divorce
battle.
Let`s go straight out to Daniel Sieberg, CNN
technology correspondent. Tell us about some of
the ominous purchases that he allegedly made online?
DANIEL SIEBERG, CNN TECHNOLOGY CORRESPONDENT:
Well, it seems as though he was running an eBay
Web site. We`ve heard that he is a pawn shop owner,
brick and mortar store, traditionally speaking.
Also running an eBay Web site where he was selling
a lot of high-end jewelry. Perhaps we can bring
up that eBay site.
He had a feedback page where he was receiving
some fairly positive feedback as an eBay seller.
And this is an item that we have actually discovered
that he received some feedback on this item just
yesterday. Now, whether this item arrived within
the last few days or someone was able to send
it out on his behalf, we simply don`t know.
I have spoken to eBay, and they have been contacted
by the Reno Police Department to try and track
down some more information. And we can pull up
his feedback page.
And also, these are some sites you might be familiar
with, Yahoo! Personals and Match.com. These are
online dating sites. So, in a sense, Darren Mack
apparently has had a lot of digital footprints
out there. He used these online dating sites.
And what you can see here is Match.com. I want
to draw your attention to this part of the page
right here which it says "active within 24
hours." This is important, because he may
actually have had access to this page recently
and contacted people, and police are warning any
people who have seen him on these sites to be
careful.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Excellent information. If you
see him, don`t approach him. Call police, and
stay away. He`s believed to be armed and dangerous.
Thank you so much.
Tonight, we remember Army Specialist Sean Creighton,
an American hero. Creighton, 21 years old, killed
in Iraq on his second tour of duty. His relatives
remember him as a generous man. Tonight, an American
hero.
We want to thank all our guests tonight for their
insight. Thanks to you at home for tracking these
important cases with us. I`m Jane Velez- Mitchell
in for Nancy Grace. We hope to see you right here
tomorrow night, 8:00 sharp Eastern. Have a wonderful
evening. Until then, thanks for joining us. Bye.
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