E-Mail Shocker In Duke Lacrosse Case
Now-Suspended Player Allegedly Wrote Of Wanting To Kill Strippers
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Play CBS Video Video Duke Professor On Alleged Rape Only On The Web: Duke University professor Houston Baker tells Trish Regan there is a long history of problems caused by the school's lacrosse players.
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Video Duke Prof.: Too Many Rumors Only On The Web: James Coleman, a professor at Duke University, talks to Trish Regan about the ongoing investigation into an alleged rape by members of the university's lacrosse team.
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Video NAACP Wants Answers The rape allegations against Duke University's lacrosse team have sent shock waves through the Durham, N.C., community. The NAACP is demanding to meet with the local prosecutor. Drew Levinson reports.
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Duke lacrosse coach Mike Pressler, center, speaks with the team during practice on campus, March 29, 2006, in Durham, N.C. Pressler resigned as coach on April 5. (AP Photo)
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This undated photo provided by the Duke University Sports Information Office shows Duke lacrosse team member Ryan McFadyen, a 19-year-old sophomore from Mendham, N.J. (AP Photo/Duke University Sports)
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Mike Pressler, left, on the job last week as lacrosse coach for Duke University in Durham, N.C. He has resigned as coach and the rest of the season has been cancelled. (AP/The News & Observer)
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Students at North Carolina Central University rally on April 3, 2006, on campus in Durham, N.C., in support of a student who alleges she was raped by members of the Duke University lacrosse team. (AP)
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This house in Durham, N.C., according to police, is the place where a 27-year-old student and stripper says she was raped on March 13, 2006, by three members of the Duke University lacrosse team. (CBS/AP)
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Interactive Sexual Assault Facts and statistics on sexual assault and rape, with victim resources.
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Interactive FBI Crime Statistics Explore the latest information on U.S. crime, from acts of violence to property damage.
Wednesday's cascade of events was the latest fallout from allegations that three players on the lacrosse team raped an exotic dancer at an off-campus party on March 13. The players were white and the stripper was a black student at a nearby state college.
CBS News correspondent Trish Regan reports that the president of Duke University, Richard Brodhead, announced that five separate commissions will investigate the team's behavior and the school's response to the scandal.
The aim, he told Regan will be "To look at our own behavior, to look at the history of the lacrosse team here, and then maybe most importantly, just to ask ourselves the question — are there things we could do to teach a sense of responsibility?"
But some think the commissions are not enough.
Professor Houston Baker, who teaches English at the university, called for changes at the very top of the school administration.
"There's a kind of macho, cock-of-the-walk, boys culture that is characterizing this administration now and I hope there will be purges in the administration as there have been voluntarily, we're told, in the sports dept with the resignation of the lacrosse coach," he told Regan.
Within the community surrounding the Duke campus in Durham, the issue of racism is also being raised, reports Regan. Like many in this community, Jessica King and Spirit Mitchell, students at nearby North Carolina Central University, the same school the alleged victim attends, believe that authorities are taking too long to make arrests.
"If it was a Duke student and it was Central's football team, the situation would have been handled totally differently," Mitchell told Regan.
Duke freshman Charisma Nelson told Regan that the allegations have put a new strain on the already delicate relationship between the school and the community of Durham.
"I don't think we wanted to admit how fragile it was," Nelson told Regan. "I think this incident shed more light and just made it more evident."
No charges have been filed in the case, but sophomore Ryan McFadyen, 19, of Mendham, N.J., the player who wrote the e-mail, has been suspended. The school’s president has called the e-mail "sickening" and "repulsive."
Students and townspeople have marched almost daily since the alleged attack. The woman, claims three white players, named Adam, Brett and Matt documents show, pulled her into a bathroom and assaulted her.
Protesters are angry over the school's handling of the allegations and the team members' refusal to cooperate with police. Investigators have said the athletes are sticking together and keeping silent.
Authorities have taken DNA samples from the team's 46 white players. The sole black player has been ruled out. District Attorney Mike Nifong has said that he is "pretty confident that a rape occurred," but that he does not expect to file charges until next week.
The team's co-captains have acknowledged hiring the stripper and serving alcohol but have denied that anyone was sexually assaulted at the party.
On Wednesday, authorities unsealed documents from a search warrant for McFadyen's residence, stating that less than two hours after the alleged rape, McFadyen sent an e-mail saying he was planning an encore to "tonights (sic) show." The message, addressed "To whom it may concern," said, "however there will be no nudity."
"I plan on killing the bitches as soon as the(y) walk in and proceeding to cut their skin off," wrote McFadyen, a 6-foot-6, 225-pound Atlantic Coast Conference honor roll player who was one of five Duke players from the exclusive Delbarton School in Morristown, N.J., adding in vulgar terms that he would find the act sexually satisfying. The e-mail was signed with McFadyen's jersey number, 41.
According to documents obtained by The Smoking Gun, investigators searched McFadyen's room and car. They walked away with two laptops, a memory card, a disposable camera, cash, and other items. Agents also seized a poster described as "the shocker" from McFadyen's room.
However, McFadyen's name does not match the three names the woman gave to police as those of her attackers.
N.C. Central Chancellor James Ammons called the e-mail "very disturbing" and encouraged students to remain calm.
"We do not want anyone from the NCCU family to seek retribution or take matters into their own hands," Ammons said in a statement. "We have to exercise a great level of civility as we await the outcome of this investigation. I am encouraging our students to continue to show support for the alleged victim and to continue to plan events that better educate individuals about sexual violence and racism."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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