Three Garden Grove, Calif. schoolgirls, worried about having to explain getting home late after school, concoct a tale about being assaulted by a man in a park. 36-year-old drifter Eric Nordmark is arrested and thrown in jail where, after the girls tell various colorful lies, he spends more than half a year, planning to commit suicide if he is convicted. Then the girls’ story falls apart, and the principal accuser admits the attack never occurred. (L.A. Times coverage: H.G. Reza and Joel Rubin, “Young Accusers Arrested, Led From School in Cuffs”, Feb. 10; Christine Hanley and Joel Rubin, “No Jail Time Expected for 3 O.C. Girls”, Feb. 11; “2 Preteen Accusers to Stay in Custody”, Feb. 12; H.G. Reza, Christine Hanley and James Ricci, “Drifter Jailed on Girls’ Lies Set Course of Desperation”, Feb. 23). Curmudgeonly Clerk (Feb. 12) writes that “some of the reactions reported in the aftermath of this event simply take my breath away”. Such as? Quoting the Los Angeles Times: “Attorneys Lee [Patti Lee, the managing attorney in the juvenile division of the public defender’s office in San Francisco] and Earley [Jack Earley, an Orange County defense attorney and president of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice] said the girls may not be guilty of anything more than being immature, and simply doing what a lot of kids their age do when they get in trouble: lie to get out of it. ‘It sounds like an adolescent tale gone awry,’ Lee said.” Historical echoes: Tawana Brawley (whose best-known advocate, lest we need reminding, is still running for president); and the English folk song “Fanny Blair” (text and tune with MIDI; background at Musical Traditions site)
False accusations? Just a phase they’re going through
Three Garden Grove, Calif. schoolgirls, worried about having to explain getting home late after school, concoct a tale about being assaulted by a man in a park. 36-year-old drifter Eric Nordmark is arrested and thrown in jail where, after the girls tell various colorful lies, he spends more than half a year, planning to commit […]
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