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- <text id=94TT0195>
- <title>
- Feb. 14, 1994: The Slippery Saga Of Tonya Harding
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 14, 1994 Are Men Really That Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 60
- The Slippery Saga Of Tonya Harding
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>She faces disciplinary proceedings but, properly lawyered, may
- yet make it to the Winter Olympics
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--With reporting by Patrick E. Cole/Portland and Andrea Dorfman/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> The date is Dec. 28. Jeff Gillooly has just been dropped off
- by his ex-wife, Tonya Harding, at the home of Harding's bodyguard,
- Shawn Eckardt. Inside, Gillooly, Eckardt and two out-of-town
- thugs for hire discuss ways to keep Nancy Kerrigan from competing
- Jan. 7 and 8 in the U.S. figure-skating championships in Detroit.
- Methodically the four men run down their options: cut Kerrigan's
- Achilles tendon, break her leg or kneecap, kill her. According
- to Gillooly, he then calls Harding and asks her to pick him
- up. As Gillooly drives, he details a proposed $2,000 deal that
- carries a money-back guarantee. If Gillooly is to be believed,
- their dialogue goes something like this:
- </p>
- <p> H: How do you feel about it?
- </p>
- <p> G: Pretty good, but I'll leave it up to you.
- </p>
- <p> H: No, I'll leave it up to you.
- </p>
- <p> G: I think we should go for it.
- </p>
- <p> H: O.K., let's do it.
- </p>
- <p> On Saturday, the U.S. Figure Skating Association decided that
- the evidence against Harding was sufficient to enforce one of
- its rules: "Any person whose acts, statements or conduct is
- considered detrimental to the welfare of figure skating is subject
- to the loss of the privilege of registration by the U.S.F.S.A."
- The association ruled that Harding must face a disciplinary
- hearing. She has 30 days to appeal the U.S.F.S.A. decision--which means the U.S. Olympic Committee will have to make a final
- decision by Feb. 21, two days before the women's competition
- begins. Meanwhile, prosecutors declined to confirm reports that
- Harding will be charged this week with "hindering prosecution"
- by lying about when she first learned of the Kerrigan plot.
- </p>
- <p> Still, nowhere in the 17 1/2 hours of testimony provided for
- investigators by Gillooly on Jan. 26 and 27 and released last
- week by Oregon's Multnomah County circuit court did he give
- evidence that independently corroborated his charge that Harding
- gave the go-ahead for the assault on Kerrigan. Despite Gillooly's
- guilty plea to one count of racketeering in exchange for a recommended
- two-year prison sentence and a $100,000 fine, his statements
- alone offered no firm basis to indict Harding in the pre-assault
- conspiracy.
- </p>
- <p> But an interesting tidbit of evidence buried in the 123 pages
- of statements lent support to Gillooly's claims that Harding
- was in on the plot from the start. Four days before Gillooly
- began testifying, a part-time sports journalist, Vera Marano
- of Pennsylvania, was questioned by investigators. Marano, who
- says she has been friends with Harding since 1990, testified
- that she had received several calls from Harding around Christmastime.
- Harding, she said, asked for two pieces of information about
- Kerrigan: Where did she train? And did she own property on Cape
- Cod? Harding explained that she was interested because of a
- "bet" she had made. Marano said that after tracking down the
- name of Kerrigan's training facility, she left the information
- on Harding's answering machine. The next day, she said, Harding
- called back to ask Marano to clarify her message.
- </p>
- <p> Gillooly has charged that Harding obtained the name of Kerrigan's
- Cape Cod training rink, the place where hitman Shane Stant said
- he stalked Kerrigan before pursuing her to Detroit. Gillooly
- testified that Harding, after listening to a message from Marano,
- told him the name of Kerrigan's rink sounded something like
- "Toby Can." Later, Gillooly claimed, he heard Harding tell Marano
- by phone, "Spell it out," and watched her write "Tony Kent Arena"
- on a piece of paper.
- </p>
- <p> Last week FBI agents received more potentially damaging evidence,
- retrieved by Kathy Peterson on Jan. 30 from a Dumpster outside
- her Portland restaurant. Peterson says the items she turned
- over included one handwritten note with the phone number and
- address of the Tony Kent Arena and the numbers "12-4," which
- mirror Kerrigan's practice hours; another note bearing the notations
- "tunee can arena" and "tony kent arena"; and an envelope addressed
- to Gillooly. The FBI reportedly began tests to determine if
- the scratchings matched Harding's handwriting.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly before Gillooly pleaded guilty, Harding denied his charges,
- insisting in a statement that "Jeff Gillooly's accusations appear
- to evidence a continued practice of abusive conduct intended
- to disrupt Tonya Harding's life and destroy her career." But
- Harding's word has a poor record for stacking up against the
- truth. On Jan. 18, she initially told investigators that Gillooly
- was innocent. Later in the interview, however, after an FBI
- agent told Harding he knew she was lying, Harding did an abrupt
- about-face. "I know now he is involved," she said of her ex-husband.
- On Jan. 27, Harding told reporters that she had learned of the
- plot "within the next few days" of returning from Detroit.
- </p>
- <p> All this may eventually add up to little more than bad judgment
- on Harding's part. Others involved in the case have behaved
- just as poorly. Last Tuesday, Gillooly's attorney Ronald Hoevet
- publicly elaborated on his client's guilty plea. Hoevet charged
- Harding with obtaining both the name of the Tony Kent Arena
- and Kerrigan's hotel-room number in Detroit and of participating
- in a Jan. 10 meeting between Gillooly and Eckardt at which an
- alibi was concocted. He said he had "no doubt" about Harding's
- guilt and suggested that it would be "unconscionable" for Harding
- to skate at the Olympics. The next day the state bar was flooded
- with calls questioning whether Hoevet had violated Oregon's
- code of professional conduct, which states, "A lawyer shall
- not make an extra-judicial statement...by means of public
- communications." At least seven people have filed formal complaints
- against Hoevet.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, opinions surfaced everywhere as to Harding's future
- on the team--from beauty salons to op-ed pages to the President
- of the U.S. ("She should be given the benefit of the doubt").
- Nike Inc. pledged $25,000 to help Harding defend herself if
- she is booted off the team. Others, however, were less sympathetic.
- Scott Hamilton, the men's Olympic figure-skating champion in
- 1984, believes "Olympic athletes are expected to live up to
- a higher ideal, to remain pure."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the constitutional guarantee of a presumption of innocence,
- the U.S.F.S.A. and the U.S.O.C. are well within their rights
- in barring her for violating their codes of ethics. In 1988,
- for example, the U.S.O.C. was prepared to kick diver Bruce Kimball
- off the Olympic team if he had qualified for a berth. An intoxicated
- Kimball had killed two teenagers in a car accident and was awaiting
- trial. Kimball, however, failed to make it past qualifying heats.
- He later pleaded guilty to manslaughter, and was sentenced to
- 17 years in prison but released on probation last year. Unlike
- the evidence against Kimball, however, the points in Harding's
- saga so far are of the he-says she-says variety. Besides, she
- has recourse to many legal maneuvers.
- </p>
- <p> If American officials try to push her off the squad, she can
- appeal to the American Arbitration Board. If the board rules
- against her, she might try to win a temporary restraining order
- from higher courts, perhaps even the U.S. Supreme Court. Harding
- may also be able to curb the actions of the International Olympic
- Committee in case it tries to get into the act. U.S. courts
- arguably have jurisdiction over the I.O.C. because of the business
- the organization does in this country--for one, the gigantic
- sums television networks spend on the Olympics. Last week I.O.C.
- officials expressed reluctance to become involved in the affairs
- of its U.S. counterpart. Richard Pound, a member of the I.O.C.
- executive board, said the U.S.O.C. "doesn't have much choice"
- but to let Harding skate--even if she is charged. "I don't
- think an accusation is enough. Grand juries can indict fire
- hydrants in the U.S. You couldn't take that seriously." The
- legal wranglings will take weeks, enough time for Harding to
- compete in Lillehammer--unless, of course, a warrant for her
- arrest requires her to surrender her passport. Still, she might
- get that waived...
- </p>
- <p> At the moment, only one thing is certain: barring further injury,
- Kerrigan will skate in the Games. After a panel of judges proclaimed
- Kerrigan physically fit last week, she at least was poised to
- pursue her Olympic dream.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-