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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=91TT2773>
<title>
Dec. 16, 1991: Behind the Blue Dot
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 31
Behind the Blue Dot
</hdr><body>
<p>By Cathy Booth/West Palm Beach
</p>
<p> She was nameless and faceless, just a blue dot, gray
smudge or white circle on TV screens. Only her shoulder-length
black hair was visible around the edges of the distortion, along
with a bit of tailored suit and a string of pearls. Inside the
courtroom, however, the jury and a few spectators had a clear
view for nearly two days of a 30-year-old single mother
struggling with a variety of emotions, from anger to anguish,
as she testified about a fateful evening.
</p>
<p> During almost 10 hours of bruising testimony and
cross-examination, the alleged rape victim struggled hard to
maintain her composure. But frequently she failed. Rather
plain-featured, simply but expensively dressed, she looked only
twice at the man she says raped her. Asked to identify him, she
exhaled and paused before nodding briefly at William Kennedy
Smith. In an almost matter-of-fact tone, she described meeting
him at the trendy Au Bar disco last Easter weekend. Smith, she
said, seemed such "a very nice man," whom she trusted because
as a medical-school student, he could talk about the problems
she had experienced with her prematurely born daughter, now 2.
</p>
<p> It was a far different man, she alleged, who slammed her
to the ground, pulled up her skirt, pulled aside her panties,
raped her and then said indifferently, "No one will believe
you." As she was asked to provide more and more graphic details
of the alleged rape, she fidgeted with her pearl necklace,
rubbed her left shoulder, then broke into uncontrollable tears.
No one gave her a tissue at first, so she wiped them away with
her hands as the courtroom audience watched in fascination.
</p>
<p> The woman struggled to maintain composure as defense
attorney Roy Black hammered away at lapses and inconsistencies
in the five statements she gave to police. How was he able to
get your legs apart? Was penetration difficult or easy? Were you
in any way sexually aroused? Did you feel ejaculation? Was he
able to maintain an erection? "Why do you have to ask me
questions like that?" she asked, looking Black in the eye as her
tears ran. Invariably when she broke down, Black would request
a recess, often over the woman's objections.
</p>
<p> During more than five hours of cross-examination, the
alleged victim held to her main accusation with steely
insistence. Only on Thursday did she let her anger break
through. With her eyes swollen from the tears, she leaned
forward and wagged her finger at Smith across the courtroom.
"What he did to me was wrong," she said. "I don't want to live
for the rest of my life in fear of that man. I don't want to be
responsible for him doing it to someone else." Presiding judge
Mary Lupo ordered jurors to disregard the statement. When
attorney Black offered one last objection, the witness still did
not buckle. "Sir," she said flatly, "your client raped me."
Afterward, she left without saying a word.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>