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Columns by Ted Vaden

Name the accuser? Here's your verdict

- Staff Writer

Published: Sun, Feb. 04, 2007 12:00AM

Modified Sun, Feb. 04, 2007 02:24AM

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Most readers don't want The N&O to name complainants in sex crime cases. But most do want the paper to name the accuser in the Duke lacrosse case.

That's the somewhat anomalous reading I got from an informal, unscientific survey of News & Observer readers last week. A number of you responded to my column in which I said the paper should not identify the accuser, unless she herself is charged (That's my opinion; N&O editors have not decided what to do.)

I asked members of the Reader Advisory Panel two questions:

1) Should The N&O identify the accuser if the case is resolved in favor of the Duke lacrosse players accused of sexual offense and kidnapping?

2) Do you agree or disagree with the paper's general policy of not naming complainants in sex crimes?

Of the 177 who answered the first question, two thirds (113) said The N&O should name the accuser. One third (59) said don't name her, and five weren't sure.

But nearly 90 percent said the paper should stick to shielding accusers' names in sex cases. Of 156 respondents, 130 said don't identify accusers, 12 said do, and 14 were ambivalent.

Many of the responses were quite thoughtful, so let's turn over the rest of today's column to the readers. (For more readers' thoughts, go to www.newsobserver.com, keyword: vaden):

Name the Duke accuser:

• "I realize this would be a difficult decision, but at this point the individual's right to privacy is subservient to the public's right to know who is behind the accusations made about the defendants and the community." -- Richard Usanis, Raleigh.

• "Why wait to see if the case is resolved in favor of the students? Because of all the inconsistencies in her story, she should be identified NOW to take some of the heat." -- Frank Schiermeier, Cary.

• "Nothing can ever put the lives of these young men back in order, but there should be at least some public consequences for anyone who makes false accusations." -- Clark Rounds, Spring Hope.

• "There should be as great stigma against making false accusations, particularly in a sex crime where anonymity protects the real criminal, as there is in the actual commission of the crime itself." -- Paul King, Raleigh.

• "After all, bearing false witness against one's neighbor is a major no-no in the Ten Commandments." -- Darlene Parsons, Raleigh.

• "I went back to Google and plugged in her name and came up with 18,300 hits. I had never imagined that the publication of the name appears almost universal except in my prime source of news, The N&O." -- Gerry Cohen, Raleigh.

Don't name her:

•"If The N&O were to make an exception in this case, then you are embarking on a slippery slope that will come back to haunt you in the future. Do you make an exception to the policy when an accusation becomes very suspect (?), mildly suspect (?), slightly suspect? Bottom line: Stick with the policy; the greater good outweighs this poor result." -- Warner Hall, Raleigh (retired obstetrician).

• "Many people are justifiably angry at her, and many probably want her name in the paper as a way of getting back at her. The N&O, though, should not become a forum for publicly tar-and-feathering someone." -- Preeti Aroon, Duke '06, Washington, D.C.

• "As it stands now, she'll probably have to move to some obscure place in the Midwest to rid herself of the stigma of bad press, regardless of whether or not she is innocent, guilty or simply had bad judgment." -- Pamela Mullins, Raleigh.

• "If she is not charged, I think you still have to withhold her name, as unfair as that seems. A finding of 'not guilty' in the students' cases doesn't mean they are innocent." -- Nancy Lee, Chapel Hill.

The Public Editor can be reached at ted.vaden@newobserver.com or by calling (919) 836-5700.

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