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Duke Releases Faculty Members From Liability Related to Lacrosse Case

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Duke Releases Faculty Members From Liability Related to Lacrosse Case

Jun 19, 07:40 PM

Current Headlines: DURHAM, N.C. _ Duke University's settlement with the exonerated lacrosse players and their families closes a prickly chapter for faculty who have spent the past year under siege from vituperative bloggers.

Neither side would disclose the terms of the agreement, announced Monday, but Duke faculty chairman Paul Haagen informed professors that one of its provisions is that all faculty members have been released from any liability related to the lacrosse case.

That news sparked another round of critical messages from e-mailers and bloggers still exercised over a student newspaper ad signed in spring of 2006 by 88 Duke professors, who decried a campus culture of racism and sexism.

As Duke shut the door on future lawsuits in the lacrosse case, the Durham County Sheriff on Tuesday slammed shut District Attorney Mike Nifong's access to the courthouse where he has worked for 29 years.

Orlando Hudson, the county's chief resident superior court judge, entered an order Tuesday suspending Nifong with pay.

Sheriff Worth Hill went to Nifong's house Tuesday morning, after a courtesy call to let him know he was on his way, and confiscated the district attorney's keys and access card to the courthouse. Arrangements will be made so Nifong can collect his personal belongings from an office he has held since April 2005.

Nifong was found guilty last week of ethics violations and professional misconduct in connection with his handling of the lacrosse case by an N.C. State Bar disciplinary panel. The panel ruled that he should be disbarred.

The disbarment does not take effect until 30 days after a written order is entered, and that could be several weeks.

Nifong on Monday submitted resignation letters to Hudson and Gov. Mike Easley, laying out a timetable that caused dismay among his critics.

Nifong said he would step down on July 13 _ not soon enough for people who worried that Nifong's being in office would do more damage to a court system struggling to restore its image.

In Nifong's absence, assistant district attorneys are handling the office's caseload.

"Everything is running smoothly," said Candy Clark, the district attorney's administrative assistant.

Once there is a vacancy, Easley must appoint a replacement. Easley on Tuesday began talking with potential candidates and others about who Nifong's successor should be.

"He wants to do that as soon as he can," said Seth Effron, a governor's spokesman. "Some of the limitations are based on what the law says."

In his order, Judge Hudson said Nifong's conduct in the Duke lacrosse case was "prejudicial to the administration of justice" and had brought disrepute to the district attorney's office.

Duke, too, is struggling to restore its image, and that, law experts say, is one reason the university would settle such a case.

"This was an unprecedented situation, the likes of which we believe will not recur and it was dealt with accordingly," said John Burness, Duke's chief spokesman. "The settlement covers all matters related to the situation to date involving Duke and its employees including members of the Duke faculty."

The money came from a legal fund, not an endowment, Burness said, but he would not disclose how much money was in the fund.

Duke trustees, who approved the settlement, either declined to discuss it or could not be reached for comment.

The agreement with the families and the players is the third settlement stemming from the lacrosse case.

The university settled with Mike Pressler, the head lacrosse coach forced to resign last spring at the height of the accusations against the players.

Recently, the university also settled with Kyle Dowd, a former lacrosse player who complained of receiving a bad grade because of his association with the team.

Paula McClain, a political science professor who on July 1 becomes chair of Duke's Academic Council, said Tuesday she hopes the settlement allows the university to move forward. Removing faculty members from any liability likely just made good sense, said McClain, who was not part of the legal discussions.

"I don't know if any faculty really felt any liability," she said. "But in a very litigious society, anyone can sue for anything."

In March 2006, lacrosse players hired two escort service dancers for a spring break party that ended with one of the dancers making allegations of gang-rape.

The accusations sparked an uproar in Durham and on the Duke campus.

Word of the settlement did apparently spark an increase in the number of vitriolic emails McClain and some of her colleagues have received since signing onto an ad placed in the student newspaper, The Chronicle. The headline said "What Does a Social Disaster Sound Like?" and the ad featured anonymous quotes from students who described a campus culture of racism and sexism, decrying "what happened to this young woman."

The ad did not mention the lacrosse team, but it was viewed by some as a condemnation of the players. It became a popular target of bloggers, a symbol of political correctness run amok.

The messages _ and the occasional fax _ range from critical to downright racist and threatening. McClain, who is black, reports the worst of them to campus police.

One recent e-mail labeled McClain a "cowardly negress" and demanded she formally apologize and resign.

McClain rarely responds to the e-mails. "I'm not going to be intimidated into modulating speech," she said.

___

(New & Observer staff writers Benjamin Niolet and Joseph Neff contributed to this report.)

___

(c) 2007, The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.).

Visit The News & Observer online at http://www.newsobserver.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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Duke Releases Faculty Members From Liability Related to Lacrosse Case
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