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- <text id=94TT0127>
- <title>
- Jan. 31, 1994: What Did Tonya Know?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 31, 1994 California:State of Shock
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 98
- What Did Tonya Know?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The skater's bodyguard tells tales to implicate her. So far,
- none have been substantiated.
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Patrick E. Cole/Portland
- </p>
- <p> Skulduggery is Shawn Eckardt's passion. With no record of military
- service, Eckardt boasts that his skills include unconventional
- warfare, surveillance, psychological operations and something
- he calls the "Secret Service characteristics matrix for assassins."
- He claims to have worked as a counterintelligence specialist
- for a Swiss company 10 years ago--when he was just 16 years
- old. He likes to pass on tales of working in Peru sabotaging
- pipelines and training in antiterrorist tactics in Israel. Having
- worked as Tonya Harding's bodyguard for two months, he is now
- passing along tales about her--indeed, three different ones.
- The first clears the skater of any wrongdoing in the attack
- on her rival Nancy Kerrigan; the second implicates her on hearsay
- evidence; the third implicates her directly. Based on his past
- bouts of braggadocio, it's impossible to know which of Eckardt's
- allegations deserve a 6.0 for technical merit and which earn
- a 6.0 for what may be called artistic impression.
- </p>
- <p> Yet unless police turn up new evidence quickly, Harding's participation
- in the Winter Olympics next month will depend largely on which
- of Eckardt's stories athletics officials choose to believe.
- With the U.S. Figure Skating Association (USFSA) facing a Jan.
- 31 deadline to name its Olympic squad, Harding, 23, remains
- an ambiguous character in the plot to cripple Kerrigan. Four
- men, including Eckardt and Harding's ex-husband Jeff Gillooly,
- 26, have been arrested and charged in the conspiracy. Investigators
- have uncovered money transfers and phone and bank records that
- link the four alleged conspirators to one another and the assault,
- but nothing in that paper trail either decisively implicates
- or clears Harding. That is unlikely to change unless prosecutors
- can squeeze new evidence from Gillooly, the only one of the
- four alleged co-conspirators who has not signed a confession.
- </p>
- <p> Suspicions about Harding's role surround a failed plan that
- predated the Jan. 6 attack in Detroit. Three of the arrested
- men--Eckardt; hit man Shane Stant, 22; and getaway driver
- Derrick Smith, 29--have told investigators that during the
- final days of 1993, they conspired with Gillooly to attack Kerrigan
- while she trained at the Tony Kent Arena on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
- An 11-page affidavit, prepared by the Multnomah County sheriff's
- office in Oregon and made public last week, states that Eckardt
- initially claimed that Harding did not know about the plot.
- But under two days of FBI interrogation, the affidavit says,
- Eckardt recalled Gillooly's telling him that Harding had assisted
- in setting up the attack by placing two phone calls from her
- Oregon home to the Tony Kent Arena to determine Kerrigan's practice
- schedule. Gillooly, said Eckardt, also spoke of Harding's constructing
- an alibi for the calls. At no point in the affidavit does Eckardt
- mention ever discussing the plan directly with Harding. But
- the same day that the affidavit was released, Eckardt, no longer
- under oath, offered the Portland Oregonian a story far more
- damaging to Harding. As Stant stalked Kerrigan on the Cape,
- Eckardt said he was summoned by Gillooly to the Portland skating
- rink where Harding trains. Eckardt claimed that Harding skated
- up to him and said she was "pissed off and disappointed that
- these guys weren't able to do what they said they were gonna
- do. And why hasn't it happened yet?" He also said that when
- the attack site shifted to Detroit, where both Kerrigan and
- Harding were scheduled to compete, Harding identified Kerrigan's
- hotel for the four men.
- </p>
- <p> Until these allegations hit the newsstand, Harding bore up in
- public with surprising composure. On Tuesday she withstood more
- than 10 hours of FBI questioning. After the eighth hour, she
- issued a statement announcing that she was separating from Gillooly--their third breakup in four tempestuous years. When she emerged
- from the interrogation at 11:25 p.m., she paused to answer reporters'
- questions. Asked if she had a message for her fans, she replied,
- "Please believe in me." Did she still believe in Gillooly? "Definitely,"
- she answered firmly.
- </p>
- <p> But after the publication of the Oregonian interview with Eckardt,
- Harding's patience cracked. Asked about the charges, she brushed
- past reporters, snapping, "I haven't spoke with anyone, O.K.?"
- When the questions continued, she shouted, "I'm not answering
- your questions, I said." A few hours later she smiled sweetly
- into the camera for ABC's Prime Time Live and said, "I believe
- God is watching over me. Maybe he believes it's time for something
- good to happen to me."
- </p>
- <p> Beyond Eckardt's ever changing accounts, the allegations that
- dog Harding emanate largely from rumor and anonymously sourced
- press reports. The only evidence in the affidavit that may begin
- to implicate Harding is a phone record of four calls placed
- between Dec. 28 and Jan. 3 from the cabin she shares with Gillooly
- to the Tony Kent Arena. The calls, however, could have been
- made by Gillooly--or even by Eckardt himself.
- </p>
- <p> The rest of the affidavit, which draws on the confessions signed
- by Eckardt, Stant and Smith, lays out a series of verbal and
- money transactions that implicate Gillooly but not Harding.
- All three co-conspirators say they met with Gillooly in Portland
- in late December; two of them say a price of $6,500 was set
- for Stant and Smith to injure Kerrigan. Eckardt and Smith concur
- that Smith was paid $2,000 on the spot, with bills supplied
- by Gillooly. Gillooly's bank records indicate that he made three
- withdrawals totaling $9,000 between Dec. 27 and Jan. 6. Western
- Union records show that on Jan. 5 and 6 Eckardt wired two payments
- to Smith. Investigators are trying to determine if any of the
- money drawn from Gillooly's account was provided by Harding.
- So far, the trail seems to be cold, save for Eckardt's claim
- in the Oregonian that Gillooly offered to pay Stant and Smith
- a bonus to get the job done--showing them a $10,000 USFSA
- check in his wallet.
- </p>
- <p> Amid the controversy, sympathetic portraits of Harding emerged.
- CBS's 60 Minutes broadcast eight-year-old video footage that
- showed her difficulties with her mother LaVona. But within the
- skating world, Harding's plight has not been greeted with universal
- sympathy--and she has largely herself to blame. For years,
- she has played a Jekyll-and-Hyde game that has earned her more
- detractors than fans. People who publicly say they believe Harding
- is now telling the truth add, sotto voce, that she has long
- had a reputation for lying.
- </p>
- <p> USFSA and Olympic officials hope that a grand jury impaneled
- last week in Oregon will move swiftly to determine whether Harding
- is to be charged or not. But the panel is not required to submit
- its report until three days after the U.S. team must be named.
- And an indictment is not a conviction, so even if charged, Harding
- will still have a strong case to compete in the Games. (She
- has legal precedent on her side. U.S. sprinter Butch Reynolds
- was barred from competing in the last Olympics after failing
- a 1990 drug test that he claimed was flawed; when a court upheld
- his claim, Reynolds won a $27.3 million judgment.)
- </p>
- <p> If Harding makes it to Lillehammer, she is likely to meet up
- again with Kerrigan. Last week the injured skater showed signs
- of rapid recovery, successfully running through her routines,
- albeit with minor jumping adjustments. Then Kerrigan took off
- for California to shoot a Reebok commercial--just the sort
- of lucrative deal Harding dreams of.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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