, Staff Writer
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Members of the Duke men's lacrosse team: You know.We know you know.Whatever happened in the bathroom at the stripper party gone terribly terribly bad, you know who was involved. Every one of you does.And one of you needs to come forward and tell the police.Do not be afraid of retribution on the team. Do not be persuaded that somehow this "happened" to one or more "good guys."If what the strippers say is true -- that one of them was raped, sodomized, beaten and strangled -- the guys responsible are not "good."This seems an elementary statement, I know.But I can see loyal team members sitting around convincing themselves that it would be disloyal to turn on their teammates -- why, the guys who were involved were just a little "over the top." In real life, they're funny. They call their mothers once a week. They share class notes with friends. They attend church.On this night, they were just a little too drunk, a little too "worked up." It was a scene straight out of "I am Charlotte Simmons" by Tom Wolfe. Indicative of the times.The alleged racial epithets slung at the strippers, who were black? Those were just ... jokes. Ditto for the ugly remarks overheard by a neighbor: "Thank your grandpa for my cotton shirt." Har, har.After all, these guys are not just Duke students, but student athletes. The collegiate dream.And the women? They were... strippers, for Pete's sake.I can see the team going down this path, justifying its silence. And it makes me sick.Because, of all the occupational hazards that must come with stripping, one of them should not be rape. And no, forced sex by a hunky prep student doesn't make it better.Unfortunately, because the team members are students at such a fine university, there is a tendency to presume that this was an aberration. That these players are "good guys."I see it in the references to the "Animal House" atmosphere allowed to flourish at the team captains' house.I sense it in the "dismay" expressed by athletics director Joe Alleva over the "situation" -- the hiring of the strippers and the (shocking!) serving of alcohol to underage teammates.But drunken parties are one thing. The implication that this event, if true, is somehow a bash that "got out of hand" is just plain wrong.Rape is not part of a spectrum of behavior, the regrettable end game when testosterone and beer are ignited by a shaking booty and fanned into flames by the larger team's permission.No. Rape is a crime. A very serious one.Those who commit it are criminals, not "good guys."I don't know what happened in that house, and in that bathroom, over in Durham. Ultimately, that will be a matter for the court system to decide. But who was in that room is something the police need to know. Now.They shouldn't have to wait for 46 DNA samples to be returned.Every member of the men's lacrosse team knows who was involved, whether it was gang rape or not.Until the team members come forward with that information, forfeiting games isn't enough.Shut down the team.
Ruth Sheehan can be reached at 829-4828 or rsheehan@newsobserver.com.