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- <text>
- <title>
- (Feb. 24, 1991) The Bad and the Beautiful
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 24, 1992 Holy Alliance
- </history>
- <link 00425>
- <link 00801>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 25
- LAW
- The Bad and the Beautiful
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Convicted of raping a beauty pageant contestant, Mike Tyson
- faces years in prison and a ruined career. Should the verdict
- comfort victims of sex crimes?
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS -- Reported by Kathleen Adams and Sophfronia
- Scott Gregory/New York
- </p>
- <p> "I believe a lot of people want to see me self-destruct.
- They want to see me one day with handcuffs and walking into the
- police car, going to jail. [They'll say] `Look, I told you he
- was headed for that.' "
- </p>
- <p> -- Mike Tyson, June 1990
- </p>
- <p> "To reach for the highest star,
- No matter how far."
- </p>
- <p> -- Desiree Washington, declaring her goal at the Miss
- Black America Pageant in Indianapolis, July 1991
- </p>
- <p> They met by a fluke of fate, like a tank and a tricycle at
- an intersection. He was the most dangerous man in sport, the
- once and (we supposed) future heavyweight champion of the
- world, whose conquests included 40 professional boxers and
- countless women. She was (we now suppose) the last innocent
- child in America, an 18-year-old Sunday School teacher fresh
- from high school graduation in a tiny Rhode Island town. When
- Desiree Washington met Mike Tyson at a beauty pageant last July,
- she saw not the pug and thug of tabloid legend but a young man
- wearing a TOGETHER WITH CHRIST button who was praying with Jesse
- Jackson. Tyson, it appears, saw a late-night snack.
- </p>
- <p> When an Indianapolis jury found Tyson guilty of rape and
- two counts of criminal sexual-deviate conduct last week, the
- verdict packed a wallop. For boxing, it meant that the sport
- would lose its top attraction for the next few years; a Tyson
- fight with the current champ, Evander Holyfield, could have
- grossed $100 million. On more profound and intimate levels, the
- conviction brought hope of legal redress to sexual victims. Says
- Lynn Hecht Schafran, a New York City attorney with the NOW Legal
- Defense and Education Fund: "The case provides a basis for
- people to go to the police. It should also make prosecutors
- pursue these cases more aggressively."
- </p>
- <p> Oddly, there was some sympathy for the devil. Many African
- Americans, including many women, thought Tyson was a scapegoat
- for white fears in a white town (the original jury was
- one-quarter black, about the percentage in Marion County, Ind.)
- and Washington was either gold-digging or criminally naive. If
- she wasn't "asking for it" by joining Tyson in his hotel
- bedroom, she was at least asking for trouble. Even in
- Indianapolis, the judgment got mixed reviews. A local TV station
- asked viewers whether they agreed with the verdict; 60% said no.
- </p>
- <p> Tyson got into this mess -- scarred his career and a young
- woman's life -- because he was not "the Greatest," like Muhammad
- Ali, but the baddest. The concept of bad, in its seductive and
- destructive meanings, has defined his life, job, behavior -- and
- conviction. Count the ways:
- </p>
- <p> Bad Attitude. Tyson was one athlete (there are others)
- with the outlaw allure of rap and heavy-metal musicians, for
- whom trashed hotel rooms and paternity suits are the currency
- of fame. Leave the gentlemanly demeanor to Julio Iglesias --
- these guys are selling sexual danger. They know there are enough
- women who find the musk of celebrity irresistible, who are
- thrilled by both the opportunity and the risk in spending the
- night with a star.
- </p>
- <p> Tyson has been with many women, treating most, perhaps,
- with no special gentility. They came not to tame the beast but
- to unleash him. And few women with whom he had had sex
- complained, at least officially. It's possible that at 2 a.m.
- on July 19 in Room 606 at the Canterbury Hotel, Tyson was as
- astonished by Washington's reaction as she was by his actions.
- </p>
- <p> Bad Company. Tyson runs with the wrong crowd. Many of his
- friends are paid help, hired as extra muscle or procurers. Don
- King, the convicted killer who promotes Tyson's bouts, is a
- sneaky-smooth fighter in smoke-filled rooms.
- </p>
- <p> Another pal, real estate peddler Donald Trump, last week
- proposed that Tyson buy his way out of jail by fighting again
- and donating his take to Indiana rape centers. This scenario
- will not unfold, even if Tyson could find an opponent
- (Holyfield, says his promoter, Dan Duva, will not fight Tyson).
- Bert Randolph Sugar, publisher of Boxing Illustrated, gives
- three reasons: "The state athletic commissions will lift his
- license. No hotel chain will sponsor it. And the event would
- have no advertising. You just can't see the announcer saying,
- `And in this corner, the convicted rapist . . . Mike Tyson!'"
- </p>
- <p> Faced with a trial that could end his career and shred
- their meal ticket, Tyson's advisers made the fatal mistake of
- underestimating the opposition. In the mid-'80s, when the young
- fighter got into trouble, his people would speak to the local
- police commissioner, give him a few ringside seats for the next
- bout . . . no more trouble. The Tyson camp may have tried that
- tactic again, offering Washington $750,000 to withdraw her
- complaint. That wouldn't happen here -- not in Indianapolis, not
- with this accuser and not with Gregory Garrison, a smart
- barrister with a homespun air, whom the local D.A. had hired as
- special prosecutor.
- </p>
- <p> Team Tyson, represented in court by Washington attorney
- Vincent Fuller, seemed unimpressed by the prosecution -- as if
- Garrison were Buster Douglas just before Iron Mike got tanked
- in Tokyo two years ago. "There were one or two members of
- Fuller's staff," notes Garrison, "who did not think us country
- bumpkins could find our asses with both hands." They were wrong
- about him, and about Washington. "She's a good kid with a pure
- heart and a tremendous amount of courage," Garrison says. "And
- she shined like a new penny in front of that jury."
- </p>
- <p> Bad Counsel. "Fuller is an exceptionally fine attorney,"
- says Robert Simels, a New York City lawyer who has represented
- many athletes. "But he was probably not the right choice to
- bring into Indianapolis. They certainly needed a strong local
- female counsel. A woman could have handled parts of the
- examination -- the questions about panty shields -- which are
- much more sensitive for a male attorney to be hitting a proposed
- rape victim with."
- </p>
- <p> Simels spots defense blunders throughout the process, from
- jury selection to the refusal to call a key witness -- Tyson's
- bodyguard -- to Fuller's loud, agitated summation. "They should
- not have let Tyson testify at the grand jury," Simels argues.
- "Then they compounded it by allowing Mike to come up with a
- different story during the trial." Tyson appeared to be lying,
- and lying stupidly, fulfilling any juror's suspicions about the
- boxer's brutality. Notes Garrison: "You couldn't look at this
- delicate little thing and imagine her having Mike Tyson say,
- `Hey, I want to f--- you,' and her saying, `Sure, call me.' You
- just said, `Aw, come on now.'"
- </p>
- <p> Bad Timing. In part, Tyson lost because the evidence, as
- presented to the jury, was against him. Garrison, while happy
- to sunbathe in the limelight, insists that the case won itself:
- "There's nothing like being right to make it winning." But it's
- also plausible that Tyson was standing trial -- if not in the
- jurors' minds, then in the docket of public opinion -- for
- crimes other than his. Crimes racial, judicial and sexual. To
- some, Tyson was the black street creep who holds urban civility
- at knife point. To others, he was the last chance for society
- to atone for its dismissal of the charges against powerful men
- like Clarence Thomas and William Kennedy Smith.
- </p>
- <p> To still others, Tyson was every celebrity athlete, pro or
- amateur, who has misused his stardom by abusing women. Just last
- week a lacrosse player at St. John's University in New York
- City pleaded guilty to forcing alcohol on a fellow student and
- then sexually assaulting her. Two of the player's teammates had
- pleaded guilty to lesser charges; three others were acquitted
- when the jury could not decide whether the woman had given
- consent -- though she could not have consented, legally, since
- she had been made drunk. (The players were white, the victim
- black.)
- </p>
- <p> So the Tyson verdict is not only a surprise but a
- desperately needed balm to those who have suffered an athlete's
- educated hands. Says Barbara Otto, a director of the 9 to 5,
- National Association of Working Women: "Tyson's conviction sends
- a message to athletes that it's not acceptable to abuse the
- rights of women who work with them."
- </p>
- <p> Before sentencing, scheduled for March 27, Tyson will
- undergo examination, and both sides will offer depositions.
- Garrison deflects the tantalizing rumors that Washington will
- appear at the hearing to plead that Tyson has already suffered
- enough. He expects "probably not a demand for much of anything.
- Except that she wants Tyson to get help." Garrison seems certain
- of one thing: "He will go to jail."
- </p>
- <p> And when he comes out, he will be allowed to fight again.
- "If," Sugar says, "he gets out alive. There's never the
- guarantee that somebody in the Michigan City, Ind., prison who's
- in on four 99-year terms without the chance of parole won't want
- to prove that he, and not Mike Tyson, is the baddest man on the
- planet."
- </p>
- <p> Some will take ironic satisfaction in the thought that
- behind iron bars, Iron Mike may finally discover that bad is not
- beautiful.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-