Readers' Note: I hope after reading this post many of you will write your own emails to Mr. Burness.
john.burness@duke.edu
Also, for reason(s) I don't understand my hyperlink to Duke's lacrosse incident page keeps getting blocked. I've put the correct address in four times.
However, if you paste the following address in yourself, it will take you to the page.
http://www.dukenews.duke.edu/mmedia/features/lacrosse_incident/
I'll be in touch with Duke to see about that probllem as well as the ones I describe below.
John
_________________________________________
John Burness, Senior Vice President
Public Affairs and Government Relations
Duke University
Dear Mr. Burness:
I’m a Duke alum and blog at www.johnincarolina.com
Duke’s News and Communication’s lacrosse incident page has been a valuable aid to many people, including me. I thank you and the university for that.
However, much about the page today is questionable; and some of it is very troubling.
I call to your attention four matters I hope you'll agree deserve your response which, like this letter, I'll share with my readers.
1) Featured prominently on the incident main page is a photo of President Brodhead with a text introduction and link to
60 Minutes’ outtake of Ed Bradley’s interview with Brodhead.
However, nowhere on the page could I find Bradley’s interview outtakes with our three wrongly indicted students - David Evans, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann.
Brodhead’s outtake contains nothing that hasn’t already rightfully appeared on the incident main page many times, typically as parts of his press releases, letters, statements to alums, students, etc.
In contrast, Finnerty and Seligmann’s outtakes are parts of their first public interviews since being framed and wrongfully indicted.
Evans’ outtake is part of his first public interview since he spoke so eloquently on the courthouse steps following his framing and indictment arranged DA Mike Nifong with enablement by many others.
What is the rationale for presenting only Brodhead’s outtake on Duke’s lacrosse incident page?
2) The
Sample of Latest Media Coverage and
Opinion & Related Material page sections contain a combined total of more than 100 articles.
But not one is by the person who’s arguably reported and commented most on the Hoax and its enablers’ monumental hypocrisies and injustices: blogger, historian and Brooklyn College Professor
Robert KC Johnson.Certainly, quantity doesn’t imply quality, so please consider this: In a recent New York magazine article,
“Rape, Justice and the Times,” Johnson was described as “the most impressive of the ‘bloggers who have closely followed the case’ [and] the Platonic ideal of the species—passionate but committed to rigor and facts and fairness.”
What’s more Johnson was the first and, I believe, is still the only news person to
interview Law Professor Edwin Chemerinsky about the case and get him on the record regarding Nifong’s handling of the case.
I could cite other examples of his work, many of them articles that have advanced the story.
Why is there not one Johnson article included among the more than 100 articles to which you link?
Does it have anything to do with Johnson’s frequently pointing out what many of us believe have been President Brodhead’s and the Arts & Sciences Faculty’s failures to fulfill their duties to the lacrosse players, their fellow students and the university?
If not, why aren't there links to some of Johnson’s many excellent articles that combine “rigor and facts and fairness?”
3) Why is there on the lacrosse incident main page the “tag,”
The Herald- Sun, Oct. 17, 2006, followed by a link taking people to a H-S editorial,
“Little new in ’60 Minutes’ report?”The H-S editorial is filled with factual errors that slime Duke students.
Example :
”The players maintained an aura of sweet innocence with reporter Ed Bradley either downplaying or ignoring conflicting evidence. Collin Finnerty, for example, was portrayed as an outstanding lacrosse prospect, but no mention was made of his recent assault conviction, with strong homophobic overtones, against a gay man on a Washington, D.C. street”
Is there anyone who doesn’t know that statement is false?
Jeffrey Bloxsom, the man H-S Editor Bob Ashley (Duke ’70) tells readers is “a gay man” has spent considerable time and money to let people know
he’s not gay. Bloxsom and his attorneys say they’ve done that not because Bloxsom would be ashamed to be gay, but because they want people to know the truth about him and not exploit the incident.
All of that was said and reported widely five months ago.
I hadn’t seen another “Collin beat a gay” falsehood until I read Ashley’s (Duke ’70) editorial.
“Yuck,” I thought, and moved on.
Then I found the falsehood again at Duke News and Communication’s lacrosse incident main page.
Ashley’s entitled to his opinions but he’s not entitled to distort the truth.
And Duke shouldn’t publicize Ashley when he distorts the truth, no matter how much and how many Allen Building administrators “appreciate all Bob does for us.”
Liestoppers.com provides many more examples of Ashley’s falsehoods and sliming of our students in his editorial.
4) This is most shocking.
Why, just two days before voting for Durham’s District Attorney began, did Duke highlight and link to Ashley’s editorial effectively endorsing Nifong?:
“We're puzzled that so many people think Nifong should ignore the indictments, ignore the accuser, and walk away. Does Durham really want a prosecutor who won't stand up for an alleged victim, even if she ranks near the bottom of society? Do we really want a prosecutor who is cowed by pressure -- and this is enormous pressure -- into dropping charges he believes should be pursued?”
Ashley has every right to endorse Nifong.
Anyone at Duke as an individual has every right to endorse and in other ways support Nifong.
But if Duke as an institution is not endorsing Nifong, then what is Ashley’s editorial doing on the Duke’s lacrosse incident main page?
More than two weeks of voting remain.
I think the matter of Ashley’s endorsement is so important I plan to call you this morning.
I’m going to encourage others who read this to email you.
Sincerely,
John
www.johnincarolina.com