Kobe Bryant's court case chosen story
of 2003 by The Associated Press
Dec 30, 2003
TIM DAHLBERG, Canadian Press
The young hotel worker's accusation was shocking enough:
Thrilled by a chance encounter with a celebrity, she went
to his room only to be forced over a chair and sexually
assaulted.
More startling was the name of the accused: Kobe Bryant.
Exactly what happened behind a locked door at a Colorado
resort June 30 probably will be up to a jury to decide
next year. But it didn't take long for the accusations
to hurt the reputations of Bryant and his accuser.
Reporters and Bryant's supporters and bashers flocked
to the small mountain town of Eagle, Colo., over the
next few months for a series of court appearances that
brought out graphic details of the 19-year-old woman's
charges along with revelations about her past.
Even with a trial months away, it became the most-watched
case against a celebrity sports figure since O.J. Simpson
was charged with murder. It was chosen the story of
the year by the newspaper and broadcast members of The
Associated Press.
In the AP voting announced Monday, the Bryant saga
received 30 first-place votes for 616 points, beating
out Lance Armstrong's record-tying fifth straight Tour
de France title (19 first-place votes, 540 points),
the Florida Marlins' surprising World Series win (12
first-place votes, 536 points) and Annika Sorenstam
becoming the first woman in 58 years to play on the
PGA Tour (seven first-place votes, 473 points).
Ten points were awarded for first place, down to one
point for a 10th-place vote.
Rounding out the top 10 were: Ohio State beating Miami
in double overtime for the U.S. college football national
championship; Sammy Sosa caught using a corked bat;
steroid scandals; Tampa Bay's Super Bowl win over Oakland;
Carmelo Anthony leading Syracuse to its first U.S. college
basketball title; and Ben Curtis capturing the British
Open in his first appearance at a major.
Kobe Bryant isn't just any basketball player. He's
an NBA superstar making millions a year on the court
and just as much in endorsements. Advertisers saw him
as the next Michael Jordan, and he enjoyed a pristine
image as a likable player who was happily married and
the father of a baby girl.
A 2002 poll rated him the third-best product endorser
in sports, behind Tiger Woods and Jordan.
All that changed overnight when Bryant was arrested
and charged with sexually assaulting the hotel worker
who checked him into the Lodge & Spa at Cordillera
in the mountains outside Eagle.
The charges were so out of character with Bryant's
public image that one noted television interviewer -
and friend of Bryant's - immediately proclaimed on national
TV that he would be "astonished" if the charge
were true.
The accuser told police she checked in Bryant - who
had gone to Colorado for arthroscopic surgery on his
knee - and two bodyguards, then showed him to his room.
Bryant, she said, told her to return in a few minutes
and give him a tour of the resort. She did, and they
later began kissing in his room.
The woman said she tried to leave, but Bryant pulled
her dress up, forced her over a chair and had sex with
her. Afterward, she was told to go clean up, she said,
made to perform one final act, and ordered never to
tell anyone about what happened.
Bryant held a tearful news conference in Los Angeles
to deny the charge, while admitting he had consensual
sex with the woman. He held hands with his wife Vanessa,
who was given a new $4-million US diamond ring after
his arrest.
"I'm a human being. I'm a man just like everybody
else. I mourn. I cry. Just like everybody else,"
Bryant said. "And I sit here before you guys embarrassed
and ashamed for committing adultery."
It didn't take long for Bryant to understand the seriousness
of the charge. He hired two top criminal defence lawyers
and soon made his first appearance in the small Eagle
courtroom, where a judge informed him he could spend
the rest of his life in prison if convicted.
As the Lakers began training camp in October in Hawaii,
Bryant admitted being distracted and scared about his
future.
"Terrified. Not so much for myself but just for
what my family's going through," Bryant said. "They
had nothing to do with this. But just because their
names have been dragged in the mud, I'm scared for them."
Bryant's accuser, meanwhile, must have been scared
herself.
She was the target of death threats - including one
left on her home answering machine - and went into seclusion
to get away from the spotlight. At Bryant's first court
appearance in August, some of her former high school
classmates wore the basketball star's jerseys and called
their former classmate a liar.
Things didn't get much better inside the courtroom.
Bryant's defence team went ahead with a preliminary
hearing where damaging details of the accuser's story
emerged and painted him as an arrogant rapist so caught
up in his own celebrity that he had no regard for the
woman.
But Bryant's lawyers immediately signaled they were
playing hardball themselves, suggesting in court that
the woman's injuries were consistent with her having
sex with other men in the days leading up to her encounter
with Bryant.
And they made sure one more startling revelation came
out before the two-day hearing ended - that the underwear
the woman wore to her rape exam had the semen of another
man on them.
"She is not worthy of your belief," defence
lawyer Pamela Mackey told the judge.
A week before the NBA season was to begin, the judge
ordered Bryant to stand trial on the sexual assault
charge. His season would be interrupted by private jet
trips to Eagle for hearings leading up to a trial expected
next summer at the earliest.
Though Bryant was greeted by assorted boos on the road,
other fans brought signs proclaiming his innocence to
games and wore copies of his No. 8 jersey.
The Lakers kept winning on the court Bryant is so familiar
with. His fate is still uncertain in a court he becomes
more familiar with every day.
The top sports stories of the year as voted by the
Associated Press. Numbers in brackets indicate first-place
votes, the second number represents the total points
awarded:
Kobe Bryant charged with sexual assault (30) 616
Armstrong wins 5th straight Tour de France (19) 540
Florida Marlins win World Series (12) 536
Annika Sorenstam plays in a PGA event (7) 473
Ohio State beats Miami in two OT's for title (4) 389
Sammy Sosa caught using corked bat (3) 290
Sports world rocked by steroid scandals (2) 255
Tampa Bay wins Super Bowl (1) 231
Carmelo Anthony leads Syracuse to title 177
Ben Curtis win British Open 148
Clemens 300 wins-4,000 strikeouts (1) 143
Barry Bonds wins sixth MVP (1) 135
LeBron James emergence into NBA (3) 84
San Antonio wins NBA title (1) 80
Baylor's Patrick Dennehy murdered 77
Funny Cide wins Kentucky Derby & Preakness 63
Beckham transfer to Real Madrid 62
BCS computers leave USC out of title game (1) 30
Andy Roddick rises to No. 1 tennis 29
© Copyright 2003 The Canadian Press
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