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Overlooking Brad Ross; from KC (repost)
Topic Started: Mar 4 2010, 01:29 PM (236 Views)
Quasimodo

http://durhamwonderland.blogspot.com/2007/06/overlooking-brad-ross.html

Monday, June 04, 2007

Overlooking Brad Ross

(snip)

Ross also was a key figure in the lacrosse case. He was the only team member that Crystal Mangum twice remembered, with 100 percent certainty, seeing at the party.

Indeed, in the April 4 “witness” lineup, Mangum even described what Ross was doing—standing outside, she said, chatting with Kim Roberts.

There was, of course, a small problem with Mangum’s recollection: Ross not only wasn’t at the party, he wasn’t even in Durham that evening. As Iowa State’s Gary Wells noted, the flawed identification of Ross placed Mangum “in the questionable category of eyewitnesses who [are] capable of being positive and wrong. That’s a red flag.”

The Baker/Chalmers report recently claimed that the indictments of three factually innocent people without probable cause had to go forward because defense attorneys didn’t give the DPD exculpatory evidence. But Ross did just that—to no effect.

In early April, just after President Brodhead canceled the season, Ross assembled cellphone, dorm keycard, and other forms of electronic evidence showing that he was in Raleigh from 3.00pm on March 13 through 1.00am March 14 and establishing (through his dorm keycard) that he returned to Durham only well after the party ended.

His attorneys presented this material to authorities—thereby proving, essentially before the legal case even began, that Mangum was an unreliable witness, that the flawed procedures used by Mike Nifong and the DPD had yielded flawed results.

A reader of the Baker/Chalmers report might have believed that authorities would have welcomed Ross’ exculpatory evidence. At the very least, it should have slowed down the rush to indictments. Instead, the Ross evidence was ignored. The DPD, it seems, was far less interested in exculpatory evidence than the Baker/Chalmers apologia claimed.

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Quasimodo


(from KC ) :

In the two weeks after the party, Ross assumed that he couldn’t be a suspect—but, as we all have learned, Durham justice works differently than what a logical person might expect. So after the cancellation of the season on April 5, 2006, he and his girlfriend, who attends North Carolina State, tried to track down any security-camera video of him in Raleigh that night. They couldn’t find any, but it turns out they didn’t need it; triangulation technology from his cell-phone calls established his location.

Ross compiled this material; it was presented to authorities, along with that of a few other players (such as Adam Langley) who also were not at the party. But this proof of Mangum’s unreliability as a witness made no difference to the Durham Police or to Nifong. Neither ever followed up with Ross about his exculpatory evidence. Instead, much as they did with Reade Seligmann’s more highly publicized ATM video and cellphone records, the Nifong/DPD team ignored Ross’ unimpeachable electronic evidence, since it contradicted their preferred theory of the “crime.”

Last spring, then, Ross was in an all-but-unique position: while publicly identified by Nifong as a suspect and thus (at least) partygoer, he hadn’t even been in Durham on the night of March 13. Yet on instructions from the defense team, he couldn’t publicly reveal this information. It was, he remembered, a “scary” time; until mid-May, the possibility of his being the third player indicted remained.

Seligmann, his best friend on the team (and scheduled 2006-2007 roommate), was suspended from school.
And he had to endure the same treatment that all other lacrosse players received: he remembers a fellow student spitting at him as he got off a campus bus, and he walked out of one class after a professor started railing against the team. This, like all allegations of in-class faculty misconduct from last spring, was never investigated by any Duke official.

With the resumption of school in the fall, Ross was in the public eye for the first time: on October 8, in one of the most important articles of the case, Joe Neff revealed both Ross’ alibi and the fact that Mangum had twice, inaccurately, identified him.

His friends already knew he hadn’t been at the party, so Neff’s scoop wasn’t news to them. With the attitude on campus having grown more supportive, Ross could focus again being a student—he majors in Sociology with a minor in Philosophy—and returning to lacrosse. Moving into the starting lineup, his preseason goals were simple: establish himself as a scoring threat, solidify his position as a starter, and provide leadership from a junior class decimated by the absences of Seligmann and Collin Finnerty.

(snip)

Before the Final Four, Ross got a call from Seligmann, who told him to ignore the media hype about the team winning a national championship as redemption for the falsely accused players. They should win it, Seligmann said, for themselves. Ross took the advice, he said, while at the same time sad knowing that Seligmann would never again suit up for Duke.

Ross took the same approach in the run-up to the Final Four as he did throughout the regular season. He expected both Cornell and then Johns Hopkins to overplay Danowski and Greer, and knew that he and the team’s other midfielders would have to step up their performance—as they did.
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Quasimodo



(from KC) :

Just as Ross is a highly inconvenient figure to the Baker/Chalmers argument that the investigators eagerly sought exculpatory evidence, so too does he present an obstacle to critics of the NCAA’s decision to grant this year’s sophomores, juniors, and seniors an extra year of eligibility.

UVA coach Dom Starsia fumed, “You feel like they have suffered, but are they being rewarded for what happened? Even without making any judgments about the players, all of us in lacrosse took a little hit here.”

(Starsia took less of a “hit” than most: UVA won the Duke-less 2006 national championship, after Duke had crushed Virginia in their previous meeting.) To the N&O, he again used the “rewarded” them, suggested that it was appropriate to punish the players for holding the party, and criticized the NCAA for “going back and sort of re-examining the level of punishment.”

Of course, some players were punished—the 2006 seniors did not receive another year of eligibility. And if Starsia is claiming that holding a spring-break party is sufficient to justify losing a season of play, how would he rationalize denying the extra year to someone like Ross, who never attended the party?

So now, with two years of eligibility remaining, there’s a real possibility that Ross could face Seligmann on opposing sides of the field. Asked how he would handle the situation, Ross replied, “The same way that Reade would for Brown—do everything I can to win for my team.”

In the last 15 months, first Nifong, then opposing lacrosse teams, and now the defenders of the Baker/Chalmers report have overlooked Brad Ross. Those who have done so have come to regret their error.
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LTC8K6
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Assistant to The Devil Himself
So Ross and his attorney had already ended the case, for all normal intents and purposes. After Ross presented his evidence, there really was no case.

I wonder if this is what triggered Nifong to make up some evidence?
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abb
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LTC8K6
Mar 4 2010, 02:28 PM
So Ross and his attorney had already ended the case, for all normal intents and purposes. After Ross presented his evidence, there really was no case.

I wonder if this is what triggered Nifong to make up some evidence?
He had decided to do that even before Ross cleared himself. What was the date Himan and Gottlieb broke into the dorms trying to establish who was at the party?

That's when things began to cook.
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LTC8K6
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I wonder when Ross's attorneys informed Nifong or DPD that he wasn't in Durham that night? Probably well before they actually gathered and presented the evidence.

I wonder if there were attempts to steer Crystal away from Ross during the ID procedure?

Have to go over it again and see what I can see...
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