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The city of Durham, former District Attorney Mike Nifong and the DNA laboratory hired by the disbarred ex-prosecutor conspired to falsely charge three Duke lacrosse players with rape, a federal civil lawsuit filed Friday alleges.
The 162-page document, a detailed account of every step of alleged misconduct that drips with indignation, sets the stage for a high-profile, high-stakes legal battle.
"There's never been a case like this one," said Richard Emery, one of three lawyers representing former lacrosse player Reade Seligmann.
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Greensboro, charges that the defendants maliciously conspired to charge the three men with rape, even though they knew that charges were "a total fabrication by a mentally troubled, drug-prone exotic dancer whose claims, time and again, were contradicted by physical evidence, documentary evidence, other witnesses, and even the accuser herself."
Claiming violations of constitutional rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth amendments, Seligmann and the two other exonerated lacrosse players, Dave Evans and Collin Finnerty, are seeking unspecified actual and punitive damages.
They're also seeking broad reforms in the Durham Police Department, including a court-appointed monitor who would preapprove police public statements and have the power to hire police chiefs, among other duties.
City officials and attorneys for DNA Securities Inc. promised to fight the suit.
Durham had balked on a settlement demand from the former players reported at $30 million.
The city was sued, as were former Police Chief Steve Chalmers, Deputy Chief Ron Hodge and seven other members of the department.
"We understand that the complaint asserts claims against the city and its employees that appear to be based on untested and unproven legal theories," city spokeswoman Beverly B. Thompson said Friday, adding that she couldn't elaborate on what theories those might be.
"In light of that, the City Council has directed legal counsel to vigorously defend the city and city employees in court against this lawsuit."
Bob Sar, a lawyer representing DNA Security as well as company President Richard Clark and laboratory director Brian Meehan, issued a similar short statement.
"The allegations against DNA are completely false," Sar said. "The company will vigorously defend itself and will prevail in court."
Nifong couldn't be reached for comment.
'Chilling' episode
The lawsuit called the case "one of the most chilling episodes of premeditated police, prosecutorial, and scientific misconduct in modern American history, which resulted in charges brought and maintained against three innocent Duke University students and lacrosse players over a period of more than one year."
Evans, Finnerty and Seligmann were charged with raping an escort service dancer at an off-campus lacrosse team party in March 2006. After taking over the investigation earlier this year, the state attorney general said no crime occurred and declared the three men innocent.
The motive, according to the lawsuit, was to use the false allegations as fuel for a media campaign so that Nifong could win a contested election for district attorney.
Emery said there are three elements to the conspiracy charge:
* Undermining the players' case by making inflammatory statements to the news media about their guilt and ignoring evidence that could exonerate them, including ever-changing stories from the accuser.
* Suppressing DNA evidence, which Emery said would have exonerated them in April 2006.
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