National Post

Strange twists put Patrick Kane case on thin ice.

An alleged evidence ‘hoax’ means there may never be a full accounting of what happened at Patrick Kane’s house

- Cam Cole in Vancouver Postmedia News ccole@vancouvers­un.com Twitter.com/RCamCole

And … once more into the snake pit. Perhaps this will be the last time, for it seems now all but inevitable that the next actual news item to emerge from the Patrick Kane/unnamed accuser file will be word that the case isn’t even going to court.

Maybe that’s as it should be, and maybe not.

But the believabil­ity of the victim of the alleged sexual assault by the Chicago Blackhawks star has been so badly damaged by her mother’s apparent attempt to manufactur­e evidence, a jury would be hardpresse­d to ignore the standard of reasonable doubt.

Patrick Kane has received the greatest gift possible, short of a video turning up showing he was in Siberia the night the alleged assault took place.

And all he had to do was keep his head down and continue to play hockey while the accuser’s case against him was kneecapped by her own mother.

The question of whether the 21-year-old complainan­t’s statements to the police are also discredite­d by the “elaborate hoax” — as Erie County district attorney Frank Sedita called the mother’s attempt to misdirect the investigat­ion — is central to what happens next.

“Obviously there has been an effort to create a hoax,” Sedita said. “I gotta figure out who was in on that, why they would do that and what it means vis-à-vis all the other evidence.”

But whether or not the accuser knew of, or was involved in, her mother’s actions, the 48-hour circus that it triggered is practicall­y certain be fatal to the prosecutio­n’s case.

The mother probably won’t be charged for lying about the so-called rape-kit bag she claimed to have found at her front door on Tuesday, the bag which her daughter’s attorney, Thomas Eoannou, displayed at a sensationa­l Wednesday news conference, hinting at evidenceta­mpering or misconduct or simple incompeten­ce involving police or the prosecutor’s office.

As it turns out, the examining nurse had given the mother the bag in the early morning hours of Aug. 2, after being told the accuser had changed her top before going to the hospital. The mother was supposed to put the top in the bag and turn it into the police but never did. Instead, Sedita said, police went to her house, put the top in their own evidence bag and left the hospital’s bag at the house — the same bag which, seven weeks later, the mother told Eoannou had been left by an unknown party at her front door the day before.

“She denies it, but I do not believe her story,” said Sedita, adding that as far as he knows, it’s not a crime for a private citizen to lie to or “bamboozle” an attorney with false informatio­n, but that if she had lied under oath or presented “dummiedup evidence” in court, she would be committing perjury.

Let’s be honest: chances of proving what really happened that night were never very good. They rarely are, in a he-said, she-said sexual assault allegation when the issue of consent is always the crucial point.

But now, as Sedita said, the question is not when, but if, he will even present the case to a grand jury.

And Kane very likely will walk away, a serial misbehaver hardly innocent in the global sense, but not guilty of this crime in the eyes of the law.

Lawyers and legal experts have been quoted as saying they have never experience­d such a weird series of events happening during what is usually a well-establishe­d followup routine of alleged sexual assault.

Eoannou dropped the complainan­t as a client Thursday night after learning of the mother’s deception; Kane’s lawyer, Paul Cambria, leaped on that developmen­t to say: “They fabricated evidence. I told you yesterday that this whole thing was a hoax, and now it is obvious.

“Ethically, he had to withdraw and … I think logically it means that the integrity of the accusation­s has been completely undermined,” Cambria said. It might be just as simple as that. No charges brought. Case closed. And a big sigh of relief from the Blackhawks, the National Hockey League and Kane himself, who keeps learning lessons the hard way and — maybe, one of these days — will figure out the hazards of life in the fishbowl, and act accordingl­y.

His reputation, never exactly sterling, may have taken another hit, and it’s conceivabl­e that he’s not quite endorsemen­t material any more for an image-conscious company.

But the allegation­s haven’t affected his fans, who still love him, or the eight-year contract extension at $10.5 million per season, which kicks in this fall.

So it looks like a happy ending all around, except for a couple of unidentifi­ed people, already vilified as gold-diggers, and soon to be forgotten.

Chances are, it was never going to end any other way.

 ?? Gary Wiepert / The Associate d Pres ?? Erie County District Attorney Frank Sedita said at a news conference on Friday he still has two choices: to sendthe evidence in the Patrick Kane sexual assault investigat­ion to a grand jury or to close it.
Gary Wiepert / The Associate d Pres Erie County District Attorney Frank Sedita said at a news conference on Friday he still has two choices: to sendthe evidence in the Patrick Kane sexual assault investigat­ion to a grand jury or to close it.
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y Images ?? Patrick Kane
Jonathan Daniel / Gett y Images Patrick Kane
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