Civil trial begins for Rodman
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Deepa Bharath
Dennis Rodman on Thursday testified in a civil trial that he has no
recollection of meeting a woman who accused the former NBA star of
drugging her, taking her to his West Newport home and sexually
assaulting her several times.
“I don’t recall having sex with your client,” Rodman calmly told
Marcus Mancini, attorney for plaintiff Jo Len McGowen.
Accompanied by wife Michelle, the local celebrity, notorious for
his raucous beach parties, walked into a courtroom at the Central
Justice Center wearing a long-sleeved white shirt with his hair dyed
bright blue to match the color of his jeans.
McGowen accuses Rodman of sexual battery, negligence and false
imprisonment in March 2001. She said he savagely attacked her as she
slipped in and out of consciousness.
When Mancini asked Rodman if it was possible that he had had sex
with McGowen, he simply replied: “It’s possible. Anything is
possible.”
During his testimony, Rodman said people like to toss allegations
at him.
“I’m accused of a lot of things in my life,” he said.
“Do you think you’re above the law?” Mancini asked.
“No, I don’t,” Rodman replied. “I think it’s worse to me than
anyone else in this courtroom.”
Rodman’s testimony was laced with his own brand of humor, which
elicited a few muted laughs from the gallery.
“As the owner of Josh Slocum’s, are you allowed to go behind the
bar and make drinks for people?” Mancini asked.
“I’m allowed to go to the restroom, too,” Rodman muttered under
his breath and followed it up with a quick “yes.”
Mancini, who made his opening statements before he called Rodman
to testify, said this case was about Rodman being “as bad as he wants
to be,” referring to Rodman’s autobiography “Bad as I Wanna Be.”
“Mr. Rodman considers himself above the fray and above the law,”
Mancini said. “And he does exactly what he wants to do.”
In March 2001, McGowen and two of her friends went to Josh
Slocum’s, a Mariner’s Mile restaurant that Rodman owns, Mancini said.
That was where his client met Rodman, who approached her and handed
her a beer, he said. He alleged that Rodman had slipped Rohypnol --
what is known as the “date rape drug” -- into her drink.
McGowen’s next recollection was of being on Rodman’s bed and his
brutally assaulting her, Mancini said. The bedroom door was locked
from outside, imprisoning his client, he said.
“She has been sexually assaulted,” Mancini said. “No matter what
lifestyle she had, no matter what was going on in her life, she said
‘no,’ and no means no.”
Outside the courtroom, Rodman said he was different, but has never
harmed anyone.
“People know me in Newport Beach,” he said. “I walk there on the
street. I bike there. I’m not that kind of a guy.”
Sure, he has had unconventional parties, he said.
“I have a lot of parties in my house,” he said. “People have said
Dennis is too loud. But this?”
He said he had no recollection of McGowen.
“I don’t remember what happened one and a half years ago,” he
said. “I don’t remember the movie I watched last week.”
Rodman said he did not want to go into the details of the case out
of “respect for Ms. McGowen.”
Earlier, in his opening statements, Rodman’s attorney, John McKay,
argued that McGowen willingly had sex with his client although Rodman
has no recollection of it ever happening. McKay said McGowen
“bragged” to her friends at the restaurant she worked in the days
after her meeting with Rodman about how she had bedded the celebrity.
He said McGowen filed the complaint with Newport Beach Police
Department only on March 18, 2001, after she had been fired from the
job. McKay also said he had evidence from doctors that McGowen lost
consciousness not because of a date rape drug mixed in her drink, but
because she was drinking alcohol after taking pain medication.
In February, Rodman settled another lawsuit filed by Tina New, an
aspiring model and actress who had filed a $10-million lawsuit
accusing him of drugging and raping her more than two years ago in
his Seashore Drive home.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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