Saturday, August 9, 2014
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Blogs on the news… 07-13-14
This blog is scheduled to be the last
one prior to the return of the beloved interactive sharlogs. Absence of the sharlog for all of these
recent weeks was due in large measure to computer and software problems…
problems which at last have been completely addressed and rectified. The narrative on the next sharlog dealing
with the Amtey autopsy report has been completed, and will most likely be
narrated within 24 hours. Its estimated
date of posting will hopefully be by the end of the week. The topic of the sharlog to follow will focus
on the State and media witch-hunt that has been underway against Mike Nifong
for seemingly an eternity.
Media discrediting Rashad McCants
Word count: 1,096
Well, the media is at it again… using
one of its most effective weapons in its arsenal of devious tricks –
discrediting an individual to minimize one’s message. This was used for a lengthy period against me
when I tried to alert the media and public of problems within the state’s
medical examiner system… long before The
News & Observer five-part series titled “Fatally flawed.” The
News & Observer in particular tried to mute my public service message
by painting me as an interloper and troublemaker in Mangum’s recent murder
case. It repeatedly wrote about how the
State Bar was investigating me… giving the impression that I was illegally
practicing law. Yes, I did attempt to
lend what help I could for Mangum who I accurately predicted would be given the
Judas Iscariot treatment by her defense attorney. However, the most scathing and malicious
article would come from The Indy Week
of August 22, 2013 which was essentially nothing more than a hatchet job. I knew that it would be shortly after I
approached a writer with the weekly about doing a story about the problem with
the medical examiner in Mangum’s case.
Instead, the focus of the article was focused on gossip related to
issues that occurred one or two decades ago and having no relevance on North
Carolina lives. Although the excellent
cover by Chris Williams accurately depicted my objectives and motivation
(depicted as a caped superhero saving Lady Justice), the story was meant to
have the opposite effect… one of discrediting and diminishing my influence.
Scott Fowler, a McClatchy sports
commentary writer for the Charlotte
Observer, in an article in the July 11, 2014 edition of The News & Observer titled “Jamison
calls McCants a ‘clown’” does his best to discredit Rashad McCants, the UNC-CH
basketball star who recently opened up to ESPN in an interview pertaining to
the academic and athletic so-called scandal.
Specifically McCants, who was part of the 1995 Championship UNC team
under popular head coach Roy Williams stated that his academic eligibility was
in jeopardy and that Coach Williams helped insure that McCants, a star on the
team, would remain eligible. In being
frank, McCants said that it was his belief that Coach Williams was aware that
he was enrolled in fail-proof classes provided through the African and
Afro-American Studies Department under the much maligned department head Julius
Nyang’oro.
Antawn Jamison, a UNC-CH basketballer
under Coach Williams began his collegiate career after McCants had left the
university and credited his insights on McCants’ character as stemming from
observing McCants during summer visits he would make to the Chapel Hill
area. For example, Jamison is said to
have noticed McCants’ talents and lack of focus… whatever that means. The article didn’t delve into what Jamison
meant when he referred to McCants’ lack of focus. Whether or not McCants was focused or lacked
focus, that has nothing to do with McCants’ credibility. When McCants says he didn’t write papers and
didn’t attend class, I believe him. When
McCants said that he thought Roy Williams was aware of his academic situation,
I believe that that is what he sincerely believed. Whether that was reality is something else
that only the coach can answer. From
what I have heard from McCants on interviews and from what I’ve read in the
newspapers, I strongly am of the belief that Coach Williams was more involved
with keeping his star performers academically eligible than he let has let on.
The newspaper article made it appear
as though McCants’ statements covered widespread academic misconduct involving
others as well as himself. To my
knowledge, though it may be limited, McCants talked exclusively about his
situation and did not delve into that of his teammates and other players.
Fowler quotes Jamison as saying of
McCants, “I just think he’s a clown. I
think he’s in a situation where he’s looking for attention. It’s just sad.” What does Jamison mean by his statement that
he thinks McCants is a clown? I don’t
know. Fowler doesn’t follow up on the
statement. For Jamison to state that he
believes McCants’ actions are because he’s seeking attention is extremely weak
and is quite often overused. Many
commenters to my blog site frequently accuse me of seeking attention when I
attempt to bring attention to injustices in the State’s legal system. The main reason I am forced to do so is
because the mainstream media has failed to provide this important service for
the people of North Carolina. From what
I’ve seen of McCants, it does not appear to me that he is seeking
attention. What would be his purpose for
seeking attention? What would be the
purpose for me to seek attention?
Attention is the last thing I want, but one cannot be an effective advocate
by being anonymous… and effective and credible advocate must lend his name in
order to show commitment to the causes he supports.
Jamison is also quoted as accusing
McCants of trying to “throw a black cloud over everyone who’s done it the right
way.” Again, Fowler journalistically
fails to follow-up in order to understand the essence and accuracy of Jamison’s
statement. As I have stated, I have
never seen or heard McCants denigrate others or even discuss the situation of
other players academically or otherwise.
Finally, Fowler, through Jamison,
tries to make it appear that McCants’ interviews with ESPN and other media is
vendetta-driven because of McCants’ relationship with the university… in
particular, quoting Jamison as saying about McCants, “Don’t try to bring down a
university because you don’t have a good relationship with the coaching
staff.” Where does Jamison come off
making such a statement about an athlete with whom he didn’t play and whose observations
come from occasionally seeing him every now and then during the summer?
It is clear to me that it’s not
McCants who has an agenda in all of this, but Antwan Jamison. He was not picked up after a lengthy 16-year
NBA career, and is currently trying to latch on to play for the Charlotte
Hornets for at least another year. What
better way to achieve that than by coming to the support of a beleaguered
legendary and much loved basketball coach by helping to take the wind out of
the sails of McCants whose motives in coming forward seem nothing more than
altruistic to me.
I must hand it to Scott Fowler… he
did an excellent job of subtly discrediting Rashad McCants. It certainly wasn’t overkill like the August
22, 2013 Indy Week article about me. nn
Follow-up on P. J. Hairston
Word count: 451
My last blog in defense of P. J.
Hairston may have been a bit hasty.
Going solely by the account in The
News & Observer, in which Hairston’s spokesperson said the high
schooler initiated the shoving and
punching exchanges, I charged in to defend Hairston who has been unfairly
targeted by the media. However, as
events have developed it seems as if there was no shoving during the match, and
that the one or two punches thrown by Hairston were unprovoked, unanswered by
the high school player, and occurred outside the heat of competitive sports
battle.
Like Pope Francis and the Man from
Nazareth, I do not condone violence, and it appears that Hairston was clearly
in the wrong. I find no fault in the
parents of the youth seeking out a warrant under the circumstances. It is my hope that this episode helps make
Hairston a better person… that he learns from his bad behavior and doesn’t
repeat it in the future.
Unlike politicians and many in the
media, I own up to my errors in judgment and have the courage to admit
them. Overall, my last blog about
Hairston missed the mark. See, I don’t
go around trying to make excuses. I
think that part of the problem is that many people think of me as being
perfect, so the important thing is to remember that I am a human being, just
like everyone else, and am therefore capable of making a mistake… on extremely
rare occasions.
The other stories in the news about
Hairston… switching his car with Cleveland Browns wide receiver Josh Gordon and
having an agent who is not registered should not be brought before the public
as character issues. So he switched cars
with an NFL bad boy… is that against the law?
And so what if his agent is not registered? Maybe he didn’t do his homework like he
should have in selecting him, but if anything it seems like he is the victim
here, if anything.
Even though Hairston disappointed me
in the YMCA pickup basketball game, that does not give the media the right to
scrutinize his every move. Instead of
trying to get the Hornets to fire him, why write and broadcast constructive
stories. During last year’s basketball
season the media had the chance to attack the parasitic NCAA cartel for its
draconian suspension of Hairston, but it didn’t. Fowler should’ve teed off on the avaricious
NCAA members and their self-serving policies that come at the expense of
student athletes. Had Fowler defended
Hairston’s right to play basketball last season, UNC might have made it to the
Final Four… maybe even winning the national title outright. nn
Monday, July 7, 2014
EXTRA, EXTRA!! Hold the presses -- P. J. Hairston in shoving match!
Now that Orange County D.A. Jim Woodall was forced to drop the
felony criminal charge against former African Afro-American Studies Department
head Professor Julius Nyang'oro, The News & Observer had been forced
into trying to destroy one of its other tried and true targets P. J.
Hairston. I shouldn't have been
surprised at the headline in today's newspaper that blared "Hairston part
of shoving match: Former UNC player scuffles in pickup game." But, even I was surprised that the N &
O would stoop so low as to cover such nonsense... not only that but on the
front page of the sports section above the fold.
The newspaper makes a big deal about Hairston's size (6-foot-6,
230 pounds), but doesn't even mention the size of his so-called opponent. For all we know he could've been 7-foot-4,
340 pounds... the newspaper, knowing that most readers will probably assume he
was the average size of a high schooler at about 5-foot-9, 150 pounds. Just trying to make P. J. look bad... look
like a troublemaker.
The only troublemaker in this "alleged shoving match"
is The News & Observer who, like an elementary school tattletale,
went to the Durham Police to try and stir things up... maybe even succeed in
getting Hairston arrested for assault and battery.
The media, especially The News & Observer, is good
at causing chaos and cashing in by writing and broadcasting about it. The media, in trying to scapegoat Professor
Nyang'oro for the academic-athletic situation at UNC-CH (which should have been
ignored as it is common practice at competitive sports universities throughout
the country) was undoubtedly a major impetus for Woodall's ill-advised criminal
indictment that left egg on his face... the yolk being on him.
The media likewise caused a ruckus about my innocent and
altruistic actions in helping Crystal Mangum file a few documents... knowing
that she would not be able to find representation by an attorney who would not
sell her out. The State Bar of North
Carolina admitted that it was stirred up by media types that directed them to
my self-less activities that launched its legal actions against me to enjoin me
from helping Mangum.
The pathetic article by Charlotte Observer writer Rick Bonnell,
naturally dredged up the bogus "past problems" following Hairston
which include:
1. arrest for a traffic stop;
2. arrest for marijuana possession (a charge which was
dropped); and
3. a handgun found near the car he was in.
Can you believe that? So
what if a handgun is found near a car he was in... and from the sound of it he
wasn't even the driver. I do not have a
car, but I have ridden in cars that may or may not have passed near a handgun. I have no control over that. I walk alot, and there may have been times
when I walked past a handgun... so is that against the law? What's the deal?
The more significant sports story was on the bottom of today's
sports section titled "UNC reaches out to McCants for meeting: Associate
AD sends registered letter and texts to former star." The letter by the associate athletic director
Vincent Ille read in part, "I learned today of public statements you have
made that indicate your knowledge of potential NCAA rule violations involving
the University of North Carolina. I
would like to meet with you at your ealriest convenience to dicuss this in
greater detail." No date of the
letter was given, although Ille said that he had received no response fro
McCants by Sunday, July 6th.
My view on this matter is that UNC-CH should not be acting as
police or enforcers of NCAA policy (which is immoral and self-serving). The universities and colleges should be
taking actions based upon the principles that are valued by the institutions
themselves. Who cares about NCAA policies
with their "impermissible benefits" doctrine? The NCAA is a parasitic cartel feasting on
the talents and sweat of poor student athletes... nothing more than a middleman
which should be dismantled.
McCants has been doing well in accounting for himself and his
actions with respect to recent statements he made about his collegiate life and
his motivations for making them. The
media is finding it a lot tougher going after McCants than it has Hairston and
Nyang'oro. I suggest the media-types
give it up as they will be unable to twist the truth of his words. nn
Monday, June 30, 2014
Blogs on the news – 06/30/14
Nyang’oro
update
Word count: 548
On Monday last week The News & Observer whet its readers’ appetite about the
upcoming hearing involving former UNC-CH African Afro-American Studies
Department chairman Julius Nyang’oro.
The hearing was scheduled to take place on Wednesday, however on
Tuesday, the day prior to the hearing, the media (mainly McClatchy newspapers
which are obsessed with bashing the reputation of Nyang’oro) announced that
Orange County District Attorney Jim Woodall was having second thoughts about
following through with the felony criminal prosecution of the former professor
because he had been so cooperative with the investigation into the
athletic-academic scandal lodged by Kenneth Wainstein.
Although the UNC system under President Tom Ross
prides itself in recouping the $12,000.00 paid to Nyang’oro for teaching a
summer class which did not physically meet, it promptly set about paying Mr.
Wainstein $990.00/hour and his associates in a range from $440-750/hour to
conduct an investigation into whats/whys/whens/hows of the scandal. This investigation, which has already chalked
up more than four months, has been estimated to last until this fall… and why
not since the attorneys are getting paid by the hour. They’re going to milk this golden cow for all
it’s worth!
Wainstein and his legal comrades evidently assured
the Orange County D.A. Woodall that Nyang’oro was thoroughly cooperating with
the investigation… a disclosure which seemed to shock the district attorney. Had Woodall, or his assistant D.A.s taken the
effort to question the black professor prior to criminally indicting him, then
perhaps Woodall mightn’t’ve been so awed that Nyang’oro’s behavior was
sincerely helpful.
However, in North Carolina it is a common practice
to arrest and even indict African American suspects without bothering to
question them during an initial investigation.
That’s what happened to Crystal Mangum, the Duke Lacrosse victim/accuser,
in the stabbing of Reginald Daye. Bull
City officers did not approach her an ask her for her side of the story
surrounding the early morning physical confrontation. Instead they handcuffed her (arresting her
for assault and battery in the stabbing of Daye), took her to police
headquarters, read her her Miranda Rights, then began to interrogate her. A similar scenario played out in the murder
charge against Knightdale resident Carletta Alston who spent a year in jail for
the murder of her stepfather before being released with the charge dropped and
without explanation.
Now it seems as though Woodall is going to be
forced to drop his ill-advised charge against Julius Nyang’oro… and not for the
reasons touted by the D.A. Woodall could
care less about Nyang’oro’s cooperation with Wainstein. His concern is the unexpected collateral
damage to administrators and others in UNC-CH upper echelon that a criminal
investigation would expose.
The
News & Observer last published that Woodall was in
serious self-deliberation about dropping the criminal charge against Nyang’oro
and that the hearing was still scheduled to take place on Wednesday. However, it was The Herald Sun, a Durham daily that informed the public that the
hearing had been cancelled.
So it appears that this politically charged felony
prosecution to destroy the reputation and life of Julius Nyang’oro (described
by local media as being at the center of the UNC-CH academic scandal) is going
to dissipate with a whimper instead of taking down another innocent victim with
a bang. nn
UNC-CH
Hairston scandal
Word count: 835
As far as scandals go, the one involving the
abhorrent mistreatment of UNC-CH round-baller P. J. Hairston far outweighs that
which was spawned by the media about the African and Afro-American Studies
program that was put in place by powers at UNC-CH to surreptitiously enable
academically challenged athletes to remain academically eligible to compete in
sports… particularly basketball and football.
The real scandal in the latter is that UNC system President Tom Ross is
allowing the private law firm to conduct a worthless investigation at
exorbitant hourly rates… this leading naturally to an increase in student
tuition.
However, the P. J. Hairston saga was without doubt
a tragedy that should never have happened… and one that could have been averted
had the athletic department at UNC had a bulldog-like athletic director from
the mold similar to NC State’s Debbie Yow.
The NCAA wouldn’t dare to pull such shenanigans with State knowing that
Yow would stand up for her players… especially star players the caliber of
Hairston who are capable of bringing championship trophies to school showcases
and meeting incentives that increase her compensation.
As it was, UNC-CH allowed the parasitic,
morally-lacking and avaricious NCAA intimidate it and invoke a season-long
suspension of the Tar Heels’ leading basketball scorer P. J. Hairston. The end result of this ridiculous ruling by
that self-centered organization was that UNC-CH was removed from contention in
the ACC and NCAA tournaments. As well as
the team did without Hairston, it would’ve done a heckuvalot better had he been
on the hardwood. Not only did the NCAA
ruling destroy the Tar Heel season, but it was detrimental to Hairston
himself. Despite being selected in the
first round, his prospects would’ve been much better had he been allowed to
perform during his senior year… possibly propelling him into a top ten
selection. It is apparent that his play
is NBA caliber, but the NCAA and the mainstream media have elected to represent
Hairston as an irresponsible troublemaker lacking character.
What is sad is the phony reasons given for
demeaning this student-athlete (who attended classes) and did everything he
possibly could to appease the NCAA and be allowed to play his final season on
the Tar Heel team he loved. Evidently
the NCAA was not impressed and imposed the season-long suspension for the
following: 1) an arrest during a traffic
stop for possession of marijuana (the charge later being dropped); 2) driving a
rental car which is considered by the money-crazed NCAA as being a dreaded
impermissible benefit; and 3) speeding.
Can you believe that? What a
joke!
The media is now trying to justify Hairston’s NCAA
suspension by writing that he’s owning up to his mistakes. A recent headline on the sports page of The News & Observer reads, “P. J.
says he’s a better person: Hairston says
mistakes are in the rear-view mirror.”
What’s the big revelation about that?
Face it, everybody makes mistakes.
I made plenty of mistakes when I was younger… and with time, I matured…
somewhat. Driving a rental car paid for
by someone else and speeding are not what I would consider serious violations
worthy of draconian punishment meted out by the collegiate athletic overseer. The action taken against Hairston by the NCAA
was arbitrary, baseless, and cruel.
The same newspaper of June 28, 2014, contained
another article titled “Manziel won’t tone it down,” in which Johnny Football,
the star quarterback from Texas A & M, was unapologetic about his off-time
weekend drinking and partying. He
claimed he was going to live life to the fullest.
NCAA parasites went easy on Manziel when it was
disclosed that he had signed sports memorabilia and earned a reported
$7,500.00. For this violation he was
suspended the first half of the first game of his last college football season
at A & M. Part of the laxness of his
punishment might have been due to the fact that the NCAA was making big bucks
off of selling Manziel’s jersey on its online site… a lucrative business
transaction which it apparently stopped after it was revealed in the
media. But, that’s the creed of the NCAA
– it’s okay for the NCAA to make big bucks off of Manziel, Hairston, and other
college athletes but it would be considered an illegal impermissible benefit
for the athletes themselves to do so.
I believe that the all colleges and universities
would be better off by kicking the NCAA to the curb and building from scratch
its own regulatory agency… one that would have the best interests of the
athletes in mind and one that would do away with the “impermissible benefits”
concept which is ethically conflicted.
Also, I believe that some of the enormous profits generated by college
sports programs should go towards compensating those responsible for it… the
athletes.
Unfortunately, under the NCAA, P. J. Hairston and
subsequently UNC-CH’s basketball team needlessly suffered. Even media articles directed towards
justifying the barbaric treatment of Hairston by the NCAA cannot conceal that
fact. nn
Change
the name!
Word count: 399
Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder has been
unyielding in his determination to retain the “Redskins” name for his NFL
professional football team. And it seems
as though he has picked up a few supporters including former Redskins manager
Joe Gibbs who claims the name has been positive for him. In an Associated Press article by Gary B.
Graves, Gibbs is quoted as saying: “Never once did I hear anybody ever say
anything negative about the name Redskins.
It was always prideful, it was courage involved. We have a song, ‘Hail to the Redskins,’ and
so everything, everything, about that name has been positive for me and my
past.”
Also circling the wagons around Snyder on this
issue are three Virginia legislators (Sen. Chap Petersen, Delegate Jackson
Miller, and Delegate David Ramadan) who are forming a “Redskins Pride
Caucus.” What a pathetic waste of time
and effort… sounds like something North Carolina legislators might do.
The majority of civilized America, including a
vast number of politicians and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office find that
the Redskin name is disparaging to Native Americans and should be changed. Most important, Native Americans find the
name to be demeaning and offensive.
What the Native Americans believe is
overwhelmingly what should be taken into consideration. What Joe Gibbs thinks is irrelevant as he is
not a Native American. So what if he finds
the name Redskins to be prideful…? Who
cares? And the three member Redskins
Pride Caucus, to my knowledge, is not comprised of any Native Americans. But this threesome professes to be standing
for the all-important principle of “commercial freedom”… which in a
capitalistic society readily trumps morality, compassion, and common
sense. Again, I say who cares what the
Redskins Pride Caucus thinks. It is
without Native American representation and therefore its position on the issue
is irrelevant.
What I would propose to Mr. Snyder is changing the
name from “Redskins” to “Warriors.”
Washington Warriors… that has a catchy sound, and it would enable the
team to retain its current logo. It is
the word “Redskins” after all that is problematic, and a reasonable person
would be able to understand that. Being
an African American, I am naturally more empathetic with the Native Americans’
position than is Mr. Snyder… however, it’s past time for him to walk a mile in
someone else’s moccasins and re-evaluate his stubborn position. nn
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
UNC academic-athletic probe doesn’t make sense
Word count: 1,761
It’s
been a while since Orange County District Attorney Jim Woodall set his
prosecutorial sights on former UNC-Chapel Hill Professor Julius Nyang’oro, head
of the school’s African and Afro-American Studies Department in what has become
to be known as an “academic” scandal enabling academically challenged athletes
to remain academically eligible to play inter-collegiate sports. The biased media, with emphasis on The News & Observer, has placed
Nyang’oro at the center of this brouhaha and painted him as the mastermind
behind the unscrupulous practice of enrolling scholastically under-performing
African American students in “no-show” classes and having tutor engage in
ghost-writing reports and other class assignments.
With
sickening relish in destroying the life and reputation of an African American
professional, the N & O, as
recently as Sunday, June 22, 2014, heralded the upcoming court appearance by Nyang’oro
in a felony criminal case brought by the Orange County D.A. Woodall. It seems that Nyang’oro accepted $12,000.00
for teaching a class which did not meet and which was heavily enrolled by black
student-athletes. After the media
pounced on this apparent misstep by the professor, Nyang’oro stepped down as
department chair, was forced into early retirement, and UNC-CH recouped its $12
grand salary by deducting it from Nyang’oro.
D.A.
Woodall was all set to prosecute the head of the African American studies
program when things happened which took the air out from under his wings…
namely, the light of truth started to shine.
The truth, which is plainly obvious to most Tar Heelians, is that
Nyang’oro was in reality a very small cog in a very large academic turbo-engine
which was designed to make UNC-CH competitive in football and basketball by
making sure that the athletes remained academically eligible. To begin with, many of these athletes, as
exposed by UNC whistleblower Mary Willingham, were not academically of college
caliber… some close to being illiterate.
Although they represented UNC on the gridiron and basketball court,
these students were not recruited by Nyang’oro, and he did not advise them to
enroll in his classes. Nyang’oro was
nothing more than acting as a good soldier… following orders handed down to him
by his superiors. Nyang’oro did not
devise or implement the academic-fraud system… he merely executed it as
demanded by those in high places. As a
result of the athletic successes and championships, millions of dollars were
brought to the school. It’s a fact that
winning college sports teams bring in big bucks to the institutions they
represent.
It
is evident, especially with recent revelations by former UNC roundballer Rashad
McCants that the 2005 NCAA national championship Tar Heel team owes its success
in great measure to Nyang’oro whose classes allowed McCants and other star
players on that team to remain eligible.
UNC-CH should have given Nyang’oro an award for his fidelity to the
school instead of forcing him out and using him as a scapegoat… fodder for a
district attorney who has no scruples about criminalizing an innocent African
American man. Truth be told, Julius
Nyang’oro should be repaid his $12,000.00 salary because he conducted his class
courses as demanded by those high up in the university’s chain of command… he
enabled the athletes who struggled in the classroom to remain eligible. In no way did he defraud the school or the
student-athletes. McCants, and other student
athletes in his position were aware of how the academic-eligibility game was
played and that their diploma would not be worth more than the sheepskin upon
which it was printed.
In the June 21, 2014 issue of The News & Observer, Dan Kane begins
the article “Wainstein probe reaches back” by stating “UNC-Chapel Hill wants to
move forward, so Kenneth Wainstein first has to look back. In this case, way back.” I disagree with this premise totally. I have no problem with the university moving
forward, but to hire an expensive legal firm to investigate the past is nothing
more than a waste of money. According to
the article, Wainstein has been conducting his investigation for at least four months with Wainstein personally
being paid $990.00 an hour and three of his associates being paid anywhere
between $440.00 and $775.00 an hour. How
do they get away with demanding such outrageously high compensation? UNC system President Tom Ross tries to give
assurances that the money going to pay these overpriced avaricious attorneys is
not coming from taxpayer funds. I don’t
believe that; and if that is the case, where is the money to pay them coming
from? Undoubtedly the legal tab has
risen far beyond the million dollar mark and the UNC system will logically recoup
the amount spent on this ridiculous investigation by raising tuition. Although there may be no specific taxpayer
fund footing the bill, the state institution can’t help but bilk Tar Heelian
taxpayers out of millions of dollars.
Well, at least, $12,000.00 of Nyang’oro’s pay will go towards paying for
the investigation. Comforting to know,
isn’t it?
Ross has given Wainstein and his firm
free rein in the conduct of the investigation… and no wonder it is stretching
back so far. The investigation is so
encompassing because those doing the investigation are being compensated on an
hourly basis. Nothing is to be gained by
the Wainstein investigation. Everyone
knows what happened… UNC-CH steered academically at risk athletes to “no- show”
classes to assure their academic eligibility.
By doing so, it made UNC-CH competitive in the high revenue generating
NCAA basketball and football programs.
What difference does it make who was responsible for putting together
this academic-athletic fraud? Instead
the UNC system should move forward and put in place measures to assure their
athletes are qualified to do college level work, remove no-show classes, and
see that athletes, and not tutors, read their assignments and write their
reports. By doing so, however, UNC-CH
will more likely than not become permanent cellar dwellers in the basketball
and football standings… that is, unless all other universities in the ACC adopt
the same standards.
Orange County D.A. Woodall, has likewise
wasted taxpayer money by instigating the worthless felony prosecution of
Nyang’oro. Facing the prospect of
drawing in other high-ranking officials into the criminal prosecution of the
black professor is the major impetus for Woodall to fall back from his prior
aggressive stance in this case.
Evidently, from the Wainstein investigation thus far, Woodall has
learned what most Tar Heelians already knew… that Nyang’oro was merely acting
in concert with a system which was already well established to insure the
university fielded talented football and basketball teams. For Wainstein to proceed with the Nyang’oro
prosecution would only reveal the true folly of the action taken by him against
the dedicated and loyal university professor.
In order to save face, Woodall is
claiming that he’s considering dropping charges because Nyang’oro is being
cooperative in Wainstein’s investigation.
Woodall would’ve found Nyang’oro cooperative had he conducted an
investigation instead of prematurely jumping forward to indict Nyang’oro as a
felon for accepting $12,000.00 in compensation for heading up “no-show” classes
for the benefit of UNC-CH. In The News & Observer article of June
24, 2014, titled “Nyang’oro charge may be dropped,” Woodall actually seems to
be shocked by Nyang’oro’s interaction with the Wainstein investigation saying,
“It appears that Nyang’oro has cooperated fully with them and actually, I
think, maybe gone over and above what was expected from him.”
UNC-CH history professor Jay Smith, who
for some reason has been pressing for an in-depth investigation into the
scandal, admitted that it struck him as odd that Nyang’oro is the only person
facing a penalty for the scandal. It’s
not so surprising when one considers that Nyang’oro is black. Unfortunately in this state in this post-civil
rights era, race does matter. Of course,
that is clearly evident in the Crystal Mangum case.
D.A. Woodall had absolutely no
compunction about investigating then Deputy Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Clay
Nichols for mishandling evidence in a Cumberland County murder case. But he has refused to investigate Nichols for
proven allegations of perjury in Mangum’s trial (testifying that Reginald
Daye’s spleen was removed at surgery eleven days prior to autopsy and therefore
wasn’t available at autopsy, and yet describing the organ in detail in his
autopsy report on Daye) and production of a false and fraudulent autopsy
report. However, Woodall is in league
with others, including Durham D.A. Leon Stanback, and the NC Attorney General’s
Office in refusing to investigate the work product of Nichols in the Mangum
case. That’s because it is too political
and the Powers-That-Be who have hijacked the state’s justice system are sworn
to see Mangum suffer retribution for her claims of being sexually assaulted at
a March 2006 party hosted by Duke lacrosse players.
Make no mistake about it… Woodall is the
type of district attorney the Powers-That-Be want at the reins of the important
criminal/legal position. A district
attorney who is malleable to the every whim of those in control, and a district
attorney who is not moved by issues of morality and fairness. Former District Attorney Mike Nifong would
never have indicted Professor Nyang’oro, and dollars to donunts he most definitely
would have investigated Medical Examiner Nichols for his actions in the Crystal
Mangum case. The reasons I believe
Nifong would act thusly is because he has proven himself to be a man of
integrity who is guided by precepts of ethics, fairness, and justice… a man
possessing the independence and courage to fully commit to his conscience in
doing the right thing.
These qualities with which Mike Nifong
has been endowed marked him as a major obstacle in the takeover of the justice
system, and that is the reason that he was forced from his elected position in
the powerful district attorney position.
To dissuade others from following in his footsteps, the State
methodically persecuted Nifong while the biased mainstream media crucified
him. The State and media collaborated in
a demonization enterprise against Nifong that is not dissimilar to that used
against Crystal Mangum.
To Orange County District Attorney Jim
Woodall I say: “I have the privilege of knowing Mike Nifong, and you, Mr.
Woodall, are no Mike Nifong.” And that
is the reason medical examiners will selectively not be prosecuted for
producing fraudulent autopsy reports and committing perjury at trial. That is the reason why innocent African
American professionals will be preyed upon solely for the purpose of ruining
their lives and reputations. That is why
all Tar Heelians are currently living under a legal system in which justice has
been corrupted and hijacked.
Friday, June 6, 2014
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