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Cab driver in lacrosse case acquitted (DukeLax cabbie escapes Nifongery)
Raleigh News & Observer ^ | August 29, 2006 | Staff

Posted on 08/29/2006 1:39:25 PM PDT by abb

The Durham cab driver who has surfaced as an alibi witness in the Duke lacrosse rape case today was found not guilty of a 3-year-old shoplifting charge.

Moezeldin Elmostafa is expected to provide an alibi for Reade Seligmann, one of three Duke lacrosse players indicted in the rape case, because he gave Seligmann a ride after the party that led to the rape allegations.

After authorities learned of Elmostafa's potential role in the rape case, they found an unserved warrant naming him in a 2003 shoplifting case at a Hecht’s department store at Northgate Mall in Durham. A security officer for the store testified today in district court that he saw a woman steal handbags from the store and then jump into Elmostafa’s cab, which sped away.

The security officer testified that the cab pulled away even before the woman had closed to the door. A store surveillance tape, played in court, appeared to show that the door closed first.

Defense lawyers in the lacrosse rape case have said that Elmostafa was charged because he is a favorable witness to the defense. Loflin put one of the lacrosse investigators on the witness stand this morning and produced typed notes from the lacrosse case that show District Attorney Mike Nifong wanted to be informed when Elmostafa was arrested.

Assistant District Attorney Ashley Cannon told the judge the shoplifting case has nothing to do with the rape case.

(Excerpt) Read more at newsobserver.com ...


TOPICS: Chit/Chat
KEYWORDS: duke; dukelax; durham; elmo; lacrosse; nifong
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To: Mike Nifong
But LINWOOD WILSON, the district attorney's investigator, denied that the shoplifting case was used to pressure Elmostafa.

"There ain't no truth in that," he insisted.


And this man claims to be religious or at least sings in a gospel group. Someone should ask him if he has ever heard of the 9th commandment?

Actually, "Hey Linwood, ever hear of the 9th commandment!" would make an excellent sign for someone to carry outside at a hearing we know where he will be testifying.
141 posted on 08/29/2006 10:15:29 PM PDT by JLS
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To: Mike Nifong
But LINWOOD WILSON, the district attorney's investigator, denied that the shoplifting case was used to pressure Elmostafa.

"There ain't no truth in that," he insisted.

Oh my. Usually a paper cleans up quotes like that for those they favor.

142 posted on 08/29/2006 10:21:43 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: JLS

Yes, it's already in the record that Nifong was consulted and told them to proceed and that he wanted to be notified.

Is there anyone over there with ANY integrity. Geesh.


143 posted on 08/29/2006 10:29:49 PM PDT by Mike Nifong (Somebody Stop Me !)
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To: xoxoxox

Yes xoxoxox,

Underage drinking by 20 year olds is worse than prostitution, Dirty Cops, Car-jacking, trying to run over a police officer, dealing drugs, prescription drug abuse, assault, etc. etc.

I never thought it would be this ugly - all the way around. I knew the woman had skeletons, but seems like everyone on one side of that courtroom is compromised is some fashion.


144 posted on 08/29/2006 10:34:16 PM PDT by Mike Nifong (Somebody Stop Me !)
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To: Ken H

That may be cleaned up. That is good for Linwood, he was making quotes to the press. Who wouldn't chose their words carefully.

Nifong CREATED a position for Linwood, which gave him a big pay raise. Linwood keeps trying to take responsibility, maybe that's why he was hired.



145 posted on 08/29/2006 10:37:34 PM PDT by Mike Nifong (Somebody Stop Me !)
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To: Mike Nifong
Just in from Durham in Wonderland:

http://durhamwonderland.blogspot.com/2006/08/good-old-fashioned-way.html

The recent efforts of groups like the LDF [NAACP Legal Defense Fund] or the Innocence Project show why Nifong's peculiar legal theories are of relevance beyond this case. Its high profile and the aggressiveness of the prosecution's actions mean that the case will provide a precedent, at least for North Carolina if not beyond.

The Nifong theory of DNA is a simple one: this scientific evidence can prove guilt but, apparently, can never exonerate. If his vision of justice prevails, groups like the Innocence Project would have no purpose, since DNA evidence could be used solely to help get convictions.

Is there any responsible legal figure outside the Durham County District Attorney's office who would embrace such an "old-fashioned" belief? If not, they should start speaking up, before the Nifong Rules extend beyond Durham and expose more innocent defendants to the pernicious effects of "old-fashioned" justice

146 posted on 08/29/2006 11:44:15 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: Ken H

More than DNA, absolutely nothing can exonerate!

Alibis, witnesses, Lies by the accuser, inconsistencies, common sense, Police on the scene, phone conversations - PHOTOS for God's sake.

Nifong has ignored evidence of every type.


147 posted on 08/29/2006 11:53:25 PM PDT by Mike Nifong (Somebody Stop Me !)
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To: SarahUSC
wait a minute.....there were NO blood tests taken per Nifog........

no drugs.....no dna....no injuries indicative of anything other than a stripper and her lifestyle......

148 posted on 08/30/2006 12:12:34 AM PDT by cherry (.)
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To: abb

well, abb, FR is truely the only clear souce of info of any kind.....freepers find the truths that most media never even hint at......


149 posted on 08/30/2006 12:24:17 AM PDT by cherry (.)
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To: ltc8k6
"How many people have been Nifonged and Gottliebed and couldn't escape?"

imagine people with no power or access living with this kind of intimidation for decades......it does show exactly how the poor or minorities could get shafted by the system....

when you have corrupt law enforcement and court personal, any one can be prosecuted at their whim......

and they're all democrats.....

150 posted on 08/30/2006 12:36:10 AM PDT by cherry (.)
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To: JLS; Dukie07; Guenevere; Howlin; Locomotive Breath; Jrabbit; investigateworld; maggief; TexKat; ...

http://www.heraldsun.com/durham/4-765287.html
Cabbie, lacrosse case witness, cleared

By John Stevenson, The Herald-Sun
August 29, 2006 9:58 pm

DURHAM -- An alibi witness in the Duke University lacrosse rape case was found not guilty Tuesday of aiding and abetting an unrelated shoplifting incident three years ago.

District Judge Ann McKown said the prosecution's case was not sufficient to find taxi driver Moezeldin Ahmed Elmostafa guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Several defense lawyers had accused District Attorney Mike Nifong of bringing the misdemeanor shoplifting charge against Elmostafa as a pressure tactic in the controversial rape case.

In April, Elmostafa signed a sworn affidavit saying he drove Duke lacrosse player Reade Seligmann to a bank machine, a fast-food restaurant and a campus dorm at about the time an exotic dancer claimed she was raped by Seligmann and two others at 610 N. Buchanan Blvd. in mid-March.

A month later, Elmostafa was arrested on a 2003 warrant charging him with shoplifting at the Hecht's department store at Northgate Mall. The charge was reduced to aiding and abetting earlier this month.

The cabbie testified Tuesday that he merely gave a ride to a woman who later pleaded guilty to stealing several handbags from the store. He claimed he didn't know what the woman was up to.

Lawyer Kirk Osborn, representing Seligmann, said Tuesday's acquittal "certainly was the right verdict."

Elmostafa declined to comment.

But defense lawyer Thomas Loflin had much to say, contending he was "right on every single point" in the shoplifting case.

"It's gratifying to have Mr. Elmostafa found not guilty," Loflin added. "He is truly innocent."

In a written court motion, Loflin argued Tuesday that Nifong had used the shoplifting incident "to gain a tactical advantage over [Elmostafa], to try to pressure him into changing his evidence to favor the prosecution in the lacrosse case."

Otherwise, why did authorities wait almost three years to serve the shoplifting warrant, when Elmostafa could easily have been found earlier, Loflin asked.

The defense lawyer also produced typewritten notes, purportedly made by police investigator Benjamin Himan, to show that Nifong may have shown a high degree of interest in the shoplifting incident after the lacrosse case arose.

"The DA wants the [shoplifting] warrant served," the notes said.

According to Loflin, it was "extraordinary that the head DA would take such an interest in a rinky-dink larceny case."

Nifong could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

But Linwood Wilson, the district attorney's investigator, denied that the shoplifting case was used to pressure Elmostafa.

"There ain't no truth in that," he insisted.

Wilson said Elmostafa could not be found in 2003, partly because authorities had an inaccurate spelling of his name. However, Elmostafa's correct name turned up in a routine record check earlier this year -- a check sparked by the lacrosse case, Wilson added.

"We run a criminal record check on anybody that's a witness for either side in any case," said Wilson. "When we find an outstanding warrant, we have it served. ... It has nothing to do with putting any kind of pressure on [Elmostafa]."

Wilson also said that he, rather than Nifong, personally instructed Investigator Himan to serve the three-year-old shoplifting warrant on Elmostafa.

"It all came from me," said Wilson.

During Tuesday's shoplifting trial, two officers gave testimony contradicting that of Elmostafa.

Jonathan Massey, a Hecht's loss-prevention agent in 2003, said Elmostafa initially denied any knowledge about his passenger stealing from the department store. But the cabbie later changed his story to say he did know what was going on, although he claimed he could not legally refuse to give the thief a ride, according to Massey.

Durham Police Officer Vernon Harris corroborated that version of events.

A Hecht's security video, played in court Tuesday, showed the thief getting out of Elmostafa's cab, entering Hecht's and leaving about 41 seconds later with an armful of handbags.

Massey said the tape then showed Elmostafa speeding away with the woman inside his car, running one stop sign in the Northgate parking lot and failing to come to a complete halt at another.

But defense lawyer Loflin had the tape replayed repeatedly, attempting to demonstrate that the cab accelerated at a normal speed and did not ignore any visible traffic signs.

Loflin said prosecutor Ashley Cannon had not proved any "guilty knowledge" on Elmostafa's part.

Even if Elmostafa saw the handbags in his passenger's arms, he had no way of knowing they were stolen, Loflin added. But as a practical matter, Elmostafa could not see the bags because of a taxi security shield that blocked his view, the defense lawyer said.

Cannon disagreed in her closing argument Tuesday.

"If we use any common sense and take all the evidence, we can see he [Elmostafa] did know about this before the larceny took place, while it took place and after it took place," Cannon said.

URL for this article: http://www.heraldsun.com/durham/4-765287.html

http://www.heraldsun.com/durham/4-765285.html
J.J. Redick to plead guilty to DWI

BY WILLIAM F. WEST, The Herald-Sun
August 29, 2006 9:36 pm

DURHAM -- National college basketball player of the year and former Duke star J.J. Redick intends to plead guilty to charges of driving while impaired and unlawful use of the highways resulting from an attempt to evade police.

Redick's attorney, Donald H. Beskind, stated his client's plea intentions in a letter to Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong to which the prosecutor affixed his own initials, according to court records made public Tuesday.

Redick's case was on the District Court docket Tuesday, but the letter said the case had been continued until Oct. 24, when Beskind would be available.

Nifong, Beskind and the Duke University athletics officials all declined comment or were unavailable for comment Tuesday.

Representatives of the National Basketball Association's Orlando Magic, which drafted Redick with the 11th pick of the first round of the NBA draft days after his June arrest, referred questions to Redick's agent, Arn Tellem, who didn't immediately return calls for comment.

Durham police said they stopped Redick, 22, at Belmont Apartments on LaSalle Street shortly after 1 a.m. June 13.

Redick failed a sobriety test and registered a blood-alcohol level of 0.11.

In North Carolina, the legal limit for driving after consuming alcohol is 0.08.

Redick was charged with DWI and unlawful use of the highways. He was released on $1,000 secured bond and forfeited his driving privileges for 30 days.

Redick could face a a sentence ranging from community service and/or suspension of his driver's license to a maximum of two years in prison and a $2,000 fine, it has been reported.

After his arrest, Redick issued a brief statement expressing regret and apologizing to his family and the Duke community.

Police said Redick's eyes at the time of his arrest were "very glassy" and reported "a strong odor of alcohol" on his breath.

Police said the second violation was filed because Redick "made an illegal U-turn to avoid a license check" along South LaSalle Street at Kangaroo Drive.

Redick is the leading scorer in Duke and Atlantic Coast Conference basketball history.

Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, who also leads the U.S. Olympic men's basketball program including the current Team USA playing in the world basketball championships in Japan, was not available for comment. Redick is on the Olympics roster, but a back injury kept him from participating with the team playing in Japan.

Coach K stood by his star in comments to The Herald-Sun a week after Redick's arrest.

"I'm not going to throw him down the drain," Krzyzewski said. "He's my friend, too."

The coach was on the West Coast when he saw the news reports with Redick's mug shot. He said he told Redick publicity goes with the territory.

"Thank goodness no one was hurt," Krzyzewski said. "He learned a lesson and he'll pay whatever price he has to pay, but I support him. He's a great kid. He's represented our school great. Kids make mistakes."

At the same time, Krzyzewski emphasized he didn't want anybody who drinks to drive.

"That's not acceptable, it's not legal and it's not smart and it's not fair. He understood that and has paid the consequences," the coach said.

-- Herald-Sun sports reporter Bryan Strickland contributed to this report

URL for this article: http://www.heraldsun.com/durham/4-765285.html

http://www.heraldsun.com/opinion/hsedits/56-765212.html
Students work to improve relations

The Herald-Sun
August 29, 2006 5:36 pm
To all appearances, the unusually closely watched beginning of the school year at Duke is off to a smooth start.

With national media including The New York Times, ESPN and The New Yorker weighing in with hefty revisits of the lacrosse rape case and Duke-Durham community relations, the scrutiny our community is receiving seems to have picked up just where it left off last spring as the academic year wound down.

But amid all that, classes are getting underway with an air of subdued normality. The major hubbub has been a variety of efforts engineered by students, school officials and community members to help forge strong relations before any missteps can disrupt them.

The first weekend with all students back passed relatively quietly, with scattered concerns on community electronic bulletin boards about trash but few if any substantial complaints to police or others about raucous partying.

And certainly there was no replay of last year's school-opening alcohol-enforcement sweep that netted a host of underage drinking citations right off the bat.

Meanwhile, students were busy on Saturday helping residents with their yard work and other chores throughout several north Durham neighborhoods. While the "Into the City" effort had been in the planning stages before the rape charges and their tumultuous aftermath, organizers acknowledge that the events of last spring have brought even more attention to the effort.

Tonight, students from N. C. Central University and Duke will attend a Durham Bulls game in a cornerstone of efforts to bring together students from the two campuses. One offshoot of the lacrosse case last spring was to highlight the lack of contact, often translating into suspicion, between the two universities.

Duke freshmen were bused to another Bulls game last week, one of a series of efforts by the university and by community groups to expose the new students to the surrounding community.

We can think of a host of cautionary clichés here -- one swallow does not a spring make, there's a long journey ahead, and so on.

But we have to be encouraged by town-gown relations as they have shaped up in these first few days of school.

Slipups are inevitable, and we're sure there will be events that test the relationship. Students and Duke's neighbors alike should take heart, though, in this comment from Kaitlyn Shackelton, a freshman from Reno, Nev., who explained why she was taking part in "Into the City." She told reporter Ray Gronberg:

"Durham is going to be my home for the next four years. I figured, 'anything to pitch in.'"

URL for this article: http://www.heraldsun.com/opinion/hsedits/56-765212.html

http://www.heraldsun.com/opinion/hsletters/
Nifong isn't believable

Whether you believe the Duke University lacrosse players or the accuser does not matter. District Attorney Mike Nifong must go. The citizens of Durham and the state of North Carolina who believe in justice must provide an open door and a hefty shove.

I'd like to ask Nifong point blank if he would like what he did to these young men to be visited upon his own son. Nifong is a magnificent liar when he says that he misjudged how the public would receive his multitudinous interviews. To the contrary, he judged just right.

Nifong rang a bell that cannot be unrung. It comes as no surprise that the New York Times would tap dance and tell us that there may be some plausible evidence for the prosecution without plausible elaboration. All else is secondary to the necessary removal of Nifong post haste.

Following his sick performances for the camera early on, the Times published a column by North Carolina writer Allan Gurganus, who is best known for long and tedious tales such as the 1989 "Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All" -- a book whose length is eclipsed only by its countless historical inaccuracies.

Gurganus' premature tried-and-convicted column combined smarm with the requisite julep fever.

Like Nifong, Gurganus is a Morris Deas wannabe without a Morris Deas case. When a political vulture roosts within camera range, reality always evaporates. Come trial time, Nifong can crawl out of the hole he has triangulated for himself and see if he is acceptable to an objective and intelligent jury. We'll see if the citizens of Durham will endure this man as their representative in the courtroom.

DEBRAH CORRELL
Chapel Hill
August 30, 2006

http://www.newsobserver.com/102/story/480475.html
Cabbie in lacrosse case acquitted in shoplifting

http://www.lewrockwell.com/anderson/anderson139.html
Boulder, Durham, and Sham Justice

http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/gaynor/060829
Let "60 Minutes" know you want it to do the right thing


151 posted on 08/30/2006 2:53:29 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
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To: abb

So, investigators in the Duke case were at the trial standing right next to the defendant-witness?

Were they trying to intimidate him? If not, why ere they there?


152 posted on 08/30/2006 2:58:06 AM PDT by Jezebelle (Our tax dollars are paying the ACLU to sue the Christ out of us.)
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To: Jezebelle

Indeed, why were they there?

New website. Good links to articles.
http://www.ethicaldurham.com/Home_Page.html
Duke Students for an Ethical Durham


153 posted on 08/30/2006 3:03:38 AM PDT by abb (The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
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To: Jezebelle

Himan on the left and Clayton on the right: http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/2862/372/1600/Mostafa_trial.jpg


154 posted on 08/30/2006 3:20:35 AM PDT by GAgal
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To: Neverforget01

She tested negative for a date-rape drug. We don't know what, if anything, she tested positive for.

I think the test was taken attendant to her probation order and that's why it wasn't released until the insistence of the defense forced it. Nifong could conceivably have been claiming it's not discovery because it only pertains to the probation order from Mangum's unrelated drunken, drug-addled rampage.


155 posted on 08/30/2006 3:24:27 AM PDT by Jezebelle (Our tax dollars are paying the ACLU to sue the Christ out of us.)
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To: Jezebelle
Why were they there? Let me take a wild guess...haha. Since a Lacross investigator's own notes say that Nifong asked to be notified about the cab driver's arrest, then I surmise that Nifong also wanted to know the details of the trial.

He's a real hands-on guy, isn't he? (Personally, a lot of people, myself included, would like to get some hands on HIM. It wouldn't be pretty.)

156 posted on 08/30/2006 3:24:49 AM PDT by Carolinamom (This is no time to go wobbly. - Lady Margaret Thatcher)
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To: abb
Still using the inaccurate spelling excuse, (see also Chalmer's daughter).

Anyone else having trouble buying Linwood's story? Wouldn't be the first time he was caught in a lie.

http://www.heraldsun.com/durham/4-765287.html

But Linwood Wilson, the district attorney's investigator, denied that the shoplifting case was used to pressure Elmostafa.

"There ain't no truth in that," he insisted.

Wilson said Elmostafa could not be found in 2003, partly because authorities had an inaccurate spelling of his name. However, Elmostafa's correct name turned up in a routine record check earlier this year -- a check sparked by the lacrosse case, Wilson added.

"We run a criminal record check on anybody that's a witness for either side in any case," said Wilson. "When we find an outstanding warrant, we have it served. ... It has nothing to do with putting any kind of pressure on [Elmostafa]."


http://www.newsobserver.com/102/story/480475.html

The trial, which took up the better part of Tuesday, was infused with the lacrosse controversy. Tom Loflin, Elmostafa's lawyer, filed motions seeking to have the case thrown out, accusing Nifong of trying to get Elmostafa to change his story. And all day long, two investigators on the lacrosse case, Benjamin Himan and R.D. Clayton, sat in the courtroom.

"Why are they here? Supposedly they know zero about Hecht's, so why are they here?" Loflin said after the trial.

Wilson said he asked the investigators to be in the courtroom since Loflin's motions mentioned them, and Loflin briefly put Himan on the stand to ask about typed notes turned over to defense lawyers in the lacrosse case. Himan's notes state that "Mr. Nifong wanted to know when we picked [Elmostafa] up."

157 posted on 08/30/2006 3:28:15 AM PDT by maggief
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To: abb

Morris Dees is a predatory far-left tort lawyer. He's railroaded and shaken down plenty of people, so this case IS a Morris Dees-type case.


158 posted on 08/30/2006 3:35:21 AM PDT by Jezebelle (Our tax dollars are paying the ACLU to sue the Christ out of us.)
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To: GAgal

Thanks abb and GAgal.


159 posted on 08/30/2006 3:36:29 AM PDT by Jezebelle (Our tax dollars are paying the ACLU to sue the Christ out of us.)
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To: don'tbedenied

Mangum's probation order requires Mangum to submit to drug-testing when requested by the police or the court. The results of that test could conceivably be held away from the Duke case for that reason. Whether it was positive or negative, Nifong would definitely want to keep it back. Only if it was positive for a date-rape drug would he want to use it.


160 posted on 08/30/2006 3:41:01 AM PDT by Jezebelle (Our tax dollars are paying the ACLU to sue the Christ out of us.)
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