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Duke lacrosse players relieved case has ‘closure’

Three men cleared of charges in year-long investigation involving stripper

NBC VIDEO
Duke team has gone 'from hell and back'
April 11: Former Duke lacrosse player David Evans says that the team has “gone from hell and back,” during a news conference, after it was announced that all charges were dropped in the rape case.

MSNBC

NBC VIDEO
'A tragic rush to accuse'
April 11: North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper drops the case against 3 ex-Duke lacrosse players accused of sexual assault.

MSNBC

updated 8:49 p.m. ET April 13, 2007

RALEIGH, N.C. - Nearly a year after calling the rape accusations he and two Duke lacrosse teammates faced nothing but “fantastic lies,” David Evans again stood before the cameras and proclaimed his innocence.

This time, there was no room for doubt.

North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper didn’t just dismiss all the remaining criminal charges against Evans, Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty. He took the extra step of declaring the players innocent — the victims of a “tragic rush to accuse” by a rogue prosecutor who could be disbarred for his actions.

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“This case shows the enormous consequences of overreaching by a prosecutor,” Cooper said.

The attorney general took over the case in January from Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong after the state bar charged Nifong with ethics violations over his handling of the case. On Wednesday, Cooper said the state’s investigation into a stripper’s claim that she was sexually assaulted at a team party last spring found nothing to corroborate her story.

The investigation, he said, “led us to the conclusion that no attack occurred.”

The dismissal brought an abrupt end to a yearlong case that heightened long-standing racial tensions in Durham and ignited a debate of race, sex and class at the private, elite university. The woman is black and attended nearby North Carolina Central University, a historically black school; all three Duke players are white.

In the uproar over the allegations, Duke canceled the rest of the team’s 2006 season, the lacrosse coach resigned under fire and a schism opened between faculty who supported the athletes and those who accused them of getting away with loutish frat-boy behavior for too long.

“It’s been 395 days since this nightmare began. And finally today it’s coming to a closure,” said Evans, his voice breaking at one point. “We’re just as innocent today as we were back then. Nothing has changed. The facts don’t change.”

The notice of dismissal prepared by the attorney general’s office for each player declared “this individual is innocent.”

Joseph Cheshire, who represented Evans, said defense attorneys will soon begin work to have their clients’ arrest record expunged. He called Nifong “a man who had not a care in the world about justice, but only about his personal agenda.”
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Finnerty parents, speaking in an interview aired Thursday on CBS’s “The Early Show,” said the room broke into cheers when they heard the attorney general declare the three innocent.

“He was crying. We were crying, hugging,” father Kevin Finnerty said. “I think it was just such a sensitive moment, it just blew us away.”

The past year had been a nightmare for the families as well as the three men and their former teammates, Finnerty’s mother, Mary Ellen Finnerty, said.

“Many times, I’d say to the lawyers, ’I feel like there’s a mad man chasing my son down the street and there’s nothing I can do to stop him,”’ she said. “He was willing to use these boys for his own gain.”

Nifong was out of town and could not immediately be reached for comment. But his lawyer, David Freedman, said: “If further investigation showed the boys were innocent, he would be in agreement with what the attorney general’s office decided to do.”


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