Duke Alumni Gather As Probe Roils Campus

By AARON BEARD
The Associated Press
Friday, April 21, 2006; 9:48 PM

DURHAM, N.C. -- Duke alumni began converging on campus Friday for a reunion weekend, reluctant to jump to conclusions about their alma mater's rape scandal but offering approval for how school officials have addressed it.

Like many others, Justin Swift said he has questions about what happened last month at an off-campus party hosted by the men's lacrosse team at which a stripper has said she was raped, beaten and strangled.


Duke lacrosse player Collin Finnerty, right, sits with his father Kevin Finnerty as he waits to appear before a judge in a courtroom at the Durham County Judicial Building in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, April 18, 2006. Finnerty was arrested early Tuesday on charges of raping and kidnapping a stripper hired to dance at an off-campus party. At left is Finnerty's father Kevin. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)
Duke lacrosse player Collin Finnerty, right, sits with his father Kevin Finnerty as he waits to appear before a judge in a courtroom at the Durham County Judicial Building in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, April 18, 2006. Finnerty was arrested early Tuesday on charges of raping and kidnapping a stripper hired to dance at an off-campus party. At left is Finnerty's father Kevin. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome) (Gerry Broome - AP)

"I think the general consensus is that the university is doing the right thing," said Swift, a Las Vegas architect who graduated from Duke in 1986. "I'm the kind of guy who likes people to say the right thing."

The reunion weekend comes just days after a grand jury indicted Reade Seligmann, of Essex Fells, N.J., and fellow sophomore lacrosse player Collin Finnerty, of Garden City, N.Y. Authorities believe they were two of the three white men who the 27-year-old black single mother says raped her in a bathroom of a house March 13.

Prosecutor Mike Nifong has said he hopes to charge a third suspect. Defense attorneys have strongly proclaimed the players' innocence.

On Friday, Robert Ekstrand, an attorney for dozens of the uncharged lacrosse players, said authorities have given the defense team a copy of the police report on the photo identifications made by the accuser. Ekstrand said according to the report, the accuser was shown photos of 46 lacrosse players and was told by police that all were believed to be at the party.

Ekstrand said the police should have included photos of people not linked to the case.

"There weren't any dummies in there," Ekstrand said. "There weren't elements to test her, like someone known not to be near the party or involved."

Nifong's office said Friday the prosecutor, as he has for several weeks, would not comment on the case.

Since the allegations arose, the university has canceled the team's season, its coach resigned, and it started investigations that include an examination of the behavior of the highly ranked lacrosse team. A third of the team's players have been cited for public intoxication and public urination, and Finnerty was charged last year with simple assault in Washington, D.C.

There was little chance that any alumni hadn't heard about the scandal.

"You can't avoid it. You just can't avoid it," said Jean Hoppe Hurston, a real estate broker from Virginia Beach, Va., who graduated in 1966. "It's very disheartening. I hope a resolution comes quickly so everybody can get back to their lives."


CONTINUED     1        >

© 2006 The Associated Press