February 11, 2009 5:27 PM
- Text
More Ethics Charges Against Ex-Duke D.A.
(CBS/AP)
The North Carolina State Bar has added additional ethics charges to a complaint filed against the prosecutor who brought sexual assault charges against three Duke lacrosse players, accusing him of withholding DNA evidence and making misleading statements to the court.
The added charges were made public Wednesday, about an hour before Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong was scheduled to appear at a conference to discuss details of the ethics case. The changes could lead to Nifong's removal from the bar.
The charges arise out of a case where three former Duke University lacrosse players are accused of sexual offense and kidnapping.
The State Bar's amended complaint alleges Nifong made false statements; made extrajudicial statements that were prejudicial; failed to comply with discovery rules; and engaged in conduct that involved "dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation as well as conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice."
At a hearing last month, Dr. Brian Meehan (who was hired by Nifong to conduct DNA testing on evidence collected hours after the alleged attack) testified that he and Nifong agreed to limit the report to "just the stuff that matched" the lacrosse players or three of the accuser's friends.
In an interview earlier this month with 60 Minutes correspondent Lesley Stahl, Meehan said he found DNA evidence from other unidentified men, and none from any of the lacrosse players. He spelled out that information to Nifong in person and on the phone – but left out that potentially exculpatory information about the other men from his report.
Though made aware of this information by Meeham, Nifong did not make that exculpatory evidence known to the defense, and did not do so until ordered to by a judge several months later.
The bar complaint alleges those results weren't released to defense lawyers in a timely fashion and that Nifong repeatedly said in court he had turned over all evidence that would potentially benefit the defense.
Nifong's actions constitute a "systematic abuse of prosecutorial discretion ... prejudicial to the administration of justice," the complaint read.
Nifong was to appear with his attorney at a procedural conference Wednesday morning to discuss scheduling and other administrative details of the ethics complaint.
Last month, the bar charged Nifong with violating four rules of professional conduct by making misleading and inflammatory comments about the athletes under suspicion. Citing the conflict of interest created by the ethics charges, Nifong asked the state attorney general's office to take over the lacrosse case.
Attorney General Roy Cooper has pledged a thorough review of the remaining charges pending against lacrosse players Dave Evans, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann. While Nifong dropped rape charges in late December after the accuser changed a key detail in her story, they are still charged with sexual offense and kidnapping.
All have strongly maintained their innocence.
Meanwhile, the News and Observer of Raleigh is reporting that the career of an investigator working for prosecutors in the Duke lacrosse sexual assault case has included complaints — including one that he lied as a witness.
Linwood E. Wilson, 58, Nifong's only full-time investigator, originally was hired to find people accused of writing worthless checks, The News & Observer said.
Wilson was a retired private detective when the Durham district attorney's office hired him four months before the March 13 lacrosse party where a stripper hired by the team said she was attacked.
Wilson has never been charged with a crime. His file at the state agency that licenses private investigators shows that he was investigated 20 years ago for making false statements on the stand and setting up an illegal wiretap, the newspaper reported.
Wilson said he's ready to stand by his role in the lacrosse investigation.
He also said he's worked with some of the defense attorneys in the case or their law partners as a private investigator.
The added charges were made public Wednesday, about an hour before Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong was scheduled to appear at a conference to discuss details of the ethics case. The changes could lead to Nifong's removal from the bar.
The charges arise out of a case where three former Duke University lacrosse players are accused of sexual offense and kidnapping.
The State Bar's amended complaint alleges Nifong made false statements; made extrajudicial statements that were prejudicial; failed to comply with discovery rules; and engaged in conduct that involved "dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation as well as conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice."
Nifong's office arranged for a private lab to conduct DNA testing as part of the investigation into allegations three men raped a 28-year-old woman hired to perform as a stripper at a party thrown by the lacrosse team last March.
N.C. State Bar Complaint Against Nifong
At a hearing last month, Dr. Brian Meehan (who was hired by Nifong to conduct DNA testing on evidence collected hours after the alleged attack) testified that he and Nifong agreed to limit the report to "just the stuff that matched" the lacrosse players or three of the accuser's friends.
In an interview earlier this month with 60 Minutes correspondent Lesley Stahl, Meehan said he found DNA evidence from other unidentified men, and none from any of the lacrosse players. He spelled out that information to Nifong in person and on the phone – but left out that potentially exculpatory information about the other men from his report.
Though made aware of this information by Meeham, Nifong did not make that exculpatory evidence known to the defense, and did not do so until ordered to by a judge several months later.
The bar complaint alleges those results weren't released to defense lawyers in a timely fashion and that Nifong repeatedly said in court he had turned over all evidence that would potentially benefit the defense.
Nifong's actions constitute a "systematic abuse of prosecutorial discretion ... prejudicial to the administration of justice," the complaint read.
Nifong was to appear with his attorney at a procedural conference Wednesday morning to discuss scheduling and other administrative details of the ethics complaint.
Last month, the bar charged Nifong with violating four rules of professional conduct by making misleading and inflammatory comments about the athletes under suspicion. Citing the conflict of interest created by the ethics charges, Nifong asked the state attorney general's office to take over the lacrosse case.
Attorney General Roy Cooper has pledged a thorough review of the remaining charges pending against lacrosse players Dave Evans, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann. While Nifong dropped rape charges in late December after the accuser changed a key detail in her story, they are still charged with sexual offense and kidnapping.
All have strongly maintained their innocence.
Meanwhile, the News and Observer of Raleigh is reporting that the career of an investigator working for prosecutors in the Duke lacrosse sexual assault case has included complaints — including one that he lied as a witness.
Linwood E. Wilson, 58, Nifong's only full-time investigator, originally was hired to find people accused of writing worthless checks, The News & Observer said.
Wilson was a retired private detective when the Durham district attorney's office hired him four months before the March 13 lacrosse party where a stripper hired by the team said she was attacked.
Wilson has never been charged with a crime. His file at the state agency that licenses private investigators shows that he was investigated 20 years ago for making false statements on the stand and setting up an illegal wiretap, the newspaper reported.
Wilson said he's ready to stand by his role in the lacrosse investigation.
He also said he's worked with some of the defense attorneys in the case or their law partners as a private investigator.
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