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Papers: Bryant accuser called mom next day The woman who accused NBA star Kobe Bryant of assault called her mother at work the day after the incident and begged her to come home. The woman later told her: "Mom, I was raped last night," according to previously sealed documents released Friday.
The conversation recounted by an investigator for the Eagle County prosecution team was included in 625 pages of documents and case files that are being disclosed publicly for the first time. The criminal case was dropped last month at the accuser's request.
"I could tell something was wrong. She kind of mumbled things and the way she walked in, her tone of voice," the mother said during a conversation with an unidentified interviewer in August 2003, little more than a month after the alleged attack at a Vail-area resort where Bryant was a guest and the woman was a front-desk employee.
"She didn't want to tell me anything at that time," the mother said. "I knew she would tell me when she was ready."
She recalled how her daughter, then 19, called her July 1, 2003.
"Mom, you need to come home. I need to talk to you," she said, according to the interview transcript from prosecution investigator Gerry Sandberg. When she arrived, she said her daughter had been in bed crying and asked the teen what was wrong.
"Mom, I was raped last night," her daughter said, then told her mother it was Bryant.
The 26-year-old Los Angeles Lakers star has said the sex was consensual. Prosecutors dropped the felony sexual assault charge when the woman said she did not want to participate in a trial after a series of legal rulings against her and courthouse gaffes revealed her name on a state Web site.
The woman still has a federal civil lawsuit pending against Bryant that seeks unspecified damages.
In a Sept. 12, 2003, interview with Boulder County district attorney's investigator Tom Bennett, the woman said she didn't want to report the alleged attack.
When Bennett asked why, she said "I, I wondered if people would believe me. I really didn't think anybody would. ... Because of who Mr. Bryant is."
Also included in the documents was a report from an investigator with the New Mexico attorney general's office, who helped with the case. She had talked with teenagers in Calgary, Alberta, where the alleged victim traveled several months after the alleged attack.
One of the teenagers, Kylie Robinson, said she felt the woman was not behaving like a rape victim, though she said she understood people can react differently.
"Kylie did not feel that (redacted) was a victim of a sexual assault because she seemed to make a joke of it and commented about money she was going to get from the trial," the investigator wrote.
Last month, Bryant's attorneys abruptly dropped a bid to permanently seal evidence in the case and claimed the woman had retracted portions of her previous statements to investigators in a letter written on July 31, 2004. That letter was released Friday but there were no bombshells.
In it, the woman admitted she had lied about why she was late to work the day of the incident: She had overslept, not run into car trouble.
She also said she had wrongly told investigator Doug Winters that Bryant had "made me stay in the room and wash my face."
"While I was held against my will in that room, I was not forced to wash my face," she wrote to Sandberg. "I know that none of these things change what happened, but I wanted you to know." At one point, the mother was asked how she feels about her daughter's truthfulness. "She is honest with me about the important things," she replied. "She is a normal teenager." |
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