Published January 12, 2006 in
issue 0502 of The Hook
By COURTENEY STUART
STUART@READTHEHOOK.COM
Step Nine of the famous 12 steps in Alcoholics
Anonymous requires the member to "make amends" to those he had
harmed through his addiction. Former UVA student William Nottingham
Beebe may wish he'd stopped at Step Eight.
After he tracked down and
apologized to the woman he allegedly raped at a UVA fraternity house
more than 20 years ago, the 41-year-old Nevada man was arrested last
week in Las Vegas. His attempt to make amends answered with an arrest
warrant, he now faces a possible sentence of life in
prison.
"This is really complex territory," says Phoebe
Fliakos, a Charlottesville trauma and substance abuse counselor. Making
amends for a felony that can carry jail time "seems to me to be
outside the scope of AA," she says. "He should have been
getting outside counsel."
Reached at his Las Vegas home before
his January 4 arrest, Beebe declined comment. He was incarcerated in
Clark County Detention Center in downtown Las Vegas until Tuesday,
January 10, then released on $20,000 bond, according to his Las Vegas
attorney, Brian Fisher.
Beebe's two options now, says Fisher, are to
voluntarily turn himself over to Virginia officials, or to fight
extradition. At presstime Tuesday, Beebe had not announced his
intention, and a "status check" hearing in Las Vegas was
scheduled for February 9, says Fisher.
If Beebe's "amends"
have backfired on him, they didn't bring peace to his alleged rape
victim, either.
According to the AA website, aa.org, Step Eight
encourages the member to make a list of "all persons we had
harmed," and Step Nine states that members must make direct amends
to such persons, "except when to do so would injure them or
others."
The woman who says Beebe attacked her 21years ago
likens his contact to "reopening a wound."
Making
contact
Now 39 and living in upscale Greenwich, Connecticut, Liz
Seccuro has had one unhappy marriage and, after years of therapy, is
remarried with a two-year-old daughter and a career as a successful
event planner.
Four months ago, while preparing to leave her home for
a two-week vacation, Seccuro ran out to the mailbox and found a
cream-colored envelope. She stared at the return address,
shocked.
"It was a name," she says, "I hadn't spoken
aloud in 20 years."
Trembling, Seccuro read a short note Will
Beebe had penned on vanilla-scented paper.
"In October,
1984," he wrote, "I harmed you." He invited Seccuro to
contact him "anywhere, at any time, with anyone," and included
a business card. "My prayer," he wrote, "is that you be
free and happy in your life."
The next several days were
anything but free and happy for Seccuro, who eventually sent Beebe an
email asking him why he had raped her, and if he could fill in details
of the assault that she could not recall. Over the next two months, they
exchanged lengthy emails-- an enraged Seccuro peppering Beebe with
questions, and Beebe offering explanations of how and why he did what he
did that night.
What he did that night, Seccuro says, was cruel and
brutal.
Her side
On Thursday night, October 5, 1984,
Liz Schimpf was a 17-year-old UVA first-year who had been invited to a
fraternity party.
A slim blond from Yonkers, New York, who had been
valedictorian at an all-girls Catholic high school, she says, she had
attended few parties since her arrival at UVA a month earlier. "I
was a good girl," she says, "still a virgin."
Seccuro
says her outfit that evening-- a long-sleeved crewneck sweater, Guess
mini-skirt, Mia flats, and a pearl necklace and earrings-- was typical
of the mid-1980s and was not revealing.
"We were really
conservative back then," she remembers, contrasting her attire that
night with the current college girl trends of low-rider pants and
form-fitting tank tops.
The party was at the Phi Kappa Psi house, a
stately classical mansion at the end of Mad Bowl on Rugby Road known
simply as "Phi Psi."
Seccuro was accompanied by a fellow
first-year who was rushing Phi Psi. She says the two mingled while she
drank "a beer-and-a-half."
As the night wore on, Seccuro
says, the brothers offered a house tour, which she says was typical
during rush season. "They asked us if we wanted to smoke some pot,
and I declined," she says, "but [my friend] went with
them." When her friend didn't come back, she started looking for
him, and that's when some of the men offered her a drink they called the
"house special."
Soon after she began sipping the drink,
Seccuro says, she began to feel that the men were watching her. Then she
felt "panicky and immobilized, like my arms and legs didn't work
well."
When she tried to leave the party room, one of the men
picked her up and deposited her in Beebe's bedroom. Although he lived at
the house, Beebe was never an official member of Phi Psi, according to
Shawn Collinsworth, executive director of the national
fraternity.
Beebe, Seccuro says, "grabbed me, pulled me into his
lap, and started reading me poetry." She says that at that point
she felt more irritated than fearful.
"I remember thinking,
'This is kind of loser-ish,'" she says.
Finally, she broke free,
she says, and ran out into the hall looking for her purse and another of
her male friends who was a Phi Psi brother. But both purse and friend,
she soon learned, were padlocked inside another room.
Seccuro assumed
that her friend had passed out and could not hear her calls. Now a
pediatrician in Atlanta, he did not return the Hook's
call.
Suddenly afraid, Seccuro says, she began kicking and pounding
on the door, but Beebe found her.
"He came back, grabbed me,
turned out the light, threw me on the bed, and ripped off my
clothes," she says. "I started screaming, and he covered my
mouth. He said, 'Shut up and lie still.'"
As Beebe allegedly
assaulted her, Seccuro remembers thinking, "This is what it feels
like to die. I'm going to die here, and no one's going to find
me."
Twenty-one years later, Seccuro tearfully says she knows
the truth: "Part of you does die."
Coming
clean?
Since its founding in 1935, Alcoholics Anonymous has
reportedly helped millions of people mend their lives and find sobriety.
In this case, however, its advice has disrupted lives and led to a
felony charge.
Through his emails to Seccuro, 21 years after that
1984 night, Beebe reveals he was already abusing alcohol when he met
her.
"I perceived myself as a victim of a hostile world,"
he wrote last fall. "The one escape I used, the one I could
seemingly best rely upon to make the world a more hospitable place, was
to drink."
During the semester after the incident, Beebe
reveals, he voluntarily dropped out of UVA and checked into an Arizona
rehab center. But it didn't stop his drinking-- or advance his
career.
Two years after the incident, one of Seccuro's sorority
sisters ordered a pizza for the Alpha Phi sorority house where Seccuro
was then living. Beebe, back in Charlottesville but not enrolled at the
University, was the pizza driver. "I opened the door, and I wanted
to die," she says. "I'd had no idea he was still in
town."
That was the last time they saw each other.
In his
recent emails, Beebe explained he'd had "tremendous guilt"
over his actions and that his "spirit was dying in a body that had
not yet quit."
Unmarried and without children, Beebe came to
Alcoholics Anonymous in 1993, he wrote, and got sober for
good.
"I did not know how I was going to set about repairing
wrongs I believed I could never fully right," he explained,
"most especially in the situation with you, which haunted me most
of all."
Based on teachings by Christian proselytizers, AA was
the first self-help group to promote a 12-step program. For many, the
biggest controversy is the quasi-religious Step Two: a demand that
participants acknowledge God, or at least a "higher spiritual
power." But in this case, it was Step Nine that led Beebe into
dangerous water.
Beebe reveals that before approaching Seccuro, he
sought counsel from both his AA "sponsor," or mentor, and from a woman
in AA who, he informed Seccuro, "has experience with what you have
had."
If he relied on just one rape victim for advice, says
Fliakos, he may not have understood the profound effect his reentry into
Seccuro's life could have.
For nearly a decade, Beebe wrote, he had
kept track of Seccuro's address through UVA's office of Alumni Affairs,
which releases alumni addresses to anyone who requests them. His first
few letters to Seccuro were sent to old addresses and were eventually
returned, but he finally located her in Greenwich.
While Greenwich is
an affluent address, Mariposa Avenue in Las Vegas, where Beebe owned a
one-story ranch-style house, is a more modest
neighborhood.
"His house would probably go for a couple
hundred thousand," says Sergeant Dan Flaherty of the Las Vegas
Metropolitan Police Department, who arrested Beebe. Flaherty says
Beebe's arrest at his home last week was without incident and describes
Beebe's demeanor as "somewhat surprised" and
"apathetic."
Though his current digs may have been modest,
Beebe, according to his letters, was no stranger to a life of privilege,
as he attended an exclusive prep school (which Seccuro identifies as
Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts) before entering UVA.
Authorities
characterize Beebe as a real estate agent, yet two days after his
arrest, the manager of his office can't picture him or find anyone in
the office who can.
"He's licensed here as a realtor," says Ron
Macko of Liberty Realty, the largest real estate firm in Nevada.
"Sometimes," says Macko, "agents will come in and hang their license,
never to be heard from again."
And although Seccuro says she wishes
Beebe had "never been heard from again," he offered her
financial assistance, ostensibly to help compensate her for therapy or
other expenses related to the assault.
"My welfare is of no
concern here," Beebe wrote.
Fliakos says the offer "smacks
of a bribe," and seems to minimize the actual damage done.
On
the contray, in an email, Beebe said, "I'm not intentionally minimizing
the fact of having raped you. I did."
"The step of making
amends," says a man who will identify himself only as
"Julio" in the AA General Services office in New York,
"is intended to help the individual find balance and spiritual
serenity."
Whatever his intentions, Beebe's offer gave no
serenity to Seccuro.
"I think in recovery," she fired back in an
email, "they don't really teach you about how your admission now causes
turbulence in the victim/survivor's life. I did not get to choose being
raped and having my virginity taken from me so brutally. Now I don't get
to choose having this wound reopened."
But Beebe insists
inflicting pain was not his intention in writing, and he apologizes for
the difference in their accounts of the incident.
"I want to be
clear again that I believe what you say actually happened to you,"
he wrote. "I can also say that what I recall is only my version and
is sincere and as truthful as I understand at this time."
And in
one of his final emails, sent Wednesday, November 30, Beebe seems to
recognize that his apology has begun backfiring.
"It seems no
matter what I say, you are dissatisfied that I am all about the business
of accountability and taking full responsibility as I can for having
raped you," he wrote. "And you conclude I want forgiveness,
neatly tied up in a bow. Nothing could be further from the
truth.
"Now," he wrote, "it appears from your latest
response that I'm actually doing more harm than good, which is not what
I want to do."
Another AA controversy
This is not
the first time AA has made headlines for its role in a confession.
Coincidentally, another incident happened about 30 minutes' drive from
Seccuro's hometown.
In 1988, after a night of drinking, 21-year-old
Paul Cox broke into his childhood home in Larchmont, New York, and
murdered the couple who were sleeping there, in what had formerly been
his parents' bedroom.
"I knew him," says Seccuro. "It
was absolutely shocking."
Although Cox confessed his crime over
subsequent years to "at least seven" AA members and was convicted,
his conviction was overturned on appeal, according to documents at
law.com, because the confessions were protected by the First Amendment's
Establishment Clause, which grants confidentiality to clergy. Eventually
that ruling was overturned, and Cox remained in jail.
Like Cox, Beebe
admits in his emails that he had spoken over the years to his sponsor
and other AA members about the incident, yet no evidence has surfaced
that anyone reported him. Seccuro finds the confidentiality aspect of AA
"a little creepy."
The law
When Seccuro
returned to her UVA dorm the morning of October 6, 1984, she wasn't sure
what to do. She couldn't remember going to sleep after the assault, and
assumes "my body allowed me to pass out in the middle of
it."
Earlier that morning, Seccuro says, she had awoken
"naked, and wrapped in a bloody sheet" on a sofa in Beebe's room in
the Phi Psi house.
Unable to find her underwear, she dressed and
borrowed a denim jacket from Beebe, retreived her purse from the now
un-padlocked and vacant room where her allegedly passed-out friend had
been, and then walked nearly half a mile to the Emergency Room.
She believes some of her ribs were cracked and says her face was
bruised, her foot was swollen from kicking the locked door the previous
night, and the insides of her legs were covered with dried blood.
She
says she waited five hours for someone to see her. "I said, 'I've
been raped, and I need a doctor to see me.' They were kind and brought
me some tea." But no doctor ever came.
Seccuro says a nurse came and
told her that UVA hospital was not equipped at the time to do a
so-called "rape kit," and that she would need to go to D.C. or
Richmond to have the evidence collected.
"Eventually, I just
left," she says. "I wanted to be home."
UVA medical
center spokesperson Peter Jump says he can't comment on Seccuro's case
specifically and what she recalls hearing, but he says UVA was equipped
to do forensic rape exams in 1984. "We had the same capabilities as
the hospitals in Richmond and D.C.," he says.
According to a
1999 FBI report, rape is the most under-reported crime in America. In
the mid-1980s, there was still a debate over whether there was even such
a thing as "acquaintance rape."
While the University Journal,
a now-defunct UVA newspaper, ran several rape awareness articles in the
fall of 1984, Seccuro says students didn't talk openly about the issue.
But she confided in several friends, who suggested she speak to UVA
administrators. That, she says, was a mistake.
Seccuro took her story
to then-Dean of Students Robert Canevari, who "immediately acted like he
didn't believe me," she says. She recalls the dean asking,
"Are you sure this wasn't consensual sex that just got a little too
rough?"
She claims the dean told her that Charlottesville
Police didn't have jurisdiction over the fraternity house, and so she
would have to go through UVA's police department. In fact, the contrary
is true. Seccuro says Canevari suggested she "take some time off or
transfer." Contacted for this story, the now-retired dean declines
to address the allegations.
Then-associate dean of students Sybil
Todd, who Seccuro calls "very supportive," took her to file a
report with the UVA police, but Seccuro says the fact that she had never
been examined at the hospital combined with the fact that Beebe denied
the incident both worked against her.
What might have worked in her
favor was an event several days after the assault, when Beebe allegedly
came to her dorm to retrieve his jacket when she was not at home. When
Seccuro arrived with a friend, she says she saw him leaving the building
and then discovered a note she believes he had written with a permanent
marker on her door.
"It's in your best interest to call
me," the note allegedly said, and it contained his phone
number.
In the end, says Seccuro, the school took no action against
Beebe, who withdrew from UVA of his own accord before the end of the
semester.
"I felt completely shut down," Seccuro
says.
She did not, however, remain silent. In a November 19, 1984
University Journal article by a reporter named Gayle Wald, Seccuro
told her story using the alias "Kate."
The
University responds
At a press conference last week, as
Charlottesville Police Chief Tim Longo recounted the incident, UVA's
lack of action brought some harsh words.
"It seems to me like
someone seriously dropped the ball here," said one television
reporter at the January 6 press conference.
"UVA is now looking into
what was done back then," said Longo. "It was not reported to
city police."
UVA spokesperson Carol Wood says UVA has been
"cooperating fully" with police, and has found documentation
in the Office of Student Affairs verifying Seccuro's complaint. However,
Wood says, "We don't comment on criminal investigations."
Seccuro says UVA has had plenty of time to investigate her claim.
Even before contacting police, she says, she emailed several top
officials including President John Casteen.
Wood says Casteen has
been in communication with Seccuro and offered to meet with her to
discuss her case. "He also extended to her an invitation to stay in
a University residence when she came to Charlottesville to deliver her
statement to the commonwealth's attorney," Wood says. Seccuro
declined Casteen's invitation.
UVA has experienced turbulent times
over sexual assaults recently. In March 2004, Susan Russell, the mother
of a victimized UVA student, launched the website uvavictimsofrape.com.
Although nearly 60 rapes had been reported at the school over the
previous five years, no perpetrator had been expelled or even suspended
from the school for sexual assault, while 38 had been expelled for
"honor" offenses such as cheating or stealing.
"You get kicked
out for stealing a pencil, but you can stay if you rape someone?"
asked Russell. "It just makes no sense."
More than 100
women came forward to share their stories with Russell, and one, Annie
Hylton, went public in the Hook's November 11, 2004 cover story
"How UVA turns its back on rape." Hylton's case went national
last month when she appeared on Dateline NBC.
The
alleged assault on Hylton-- which, like the one on Seccuro, occurred at
a fraternity house-- led more than 400 students to don gags to protest
what they saw as UVA's silence on the issue.
Soon after, UVA
overhauled its policies on sexual assaults, and in August 2005, Casteen
tackled the issue at the fall convocation.
"You have the right
to the integrity of your own person," Casteen told UVA women. "If you
say no, no means no."
To the men, Casteen spoke sternly. "I
want you to look around you tonight at the women sitting beside
you," he said. "These women are your sisters for the next four
years. You have an obligation to protect them, and I want to be sure
that you understand that when you hear no, it means no and that there is
no further discussion."
Up in Connecticut, Seccuro had read
about Hylton's case.
"What really pushed her over the edge was
when she read all this stuff about Annie Hylton and realized it's still
going on 20 years later," says Seccuro's husband, Mike Seccuro. A
1995 UVA grad, he says it's been difficult watching his wife dealing
with the trauma of her own rape.
"When that letter arrived, it
upended our entire lives," he says. He says his wife-- whom he
describes as previously "happy and fun-loving"-- has become
"much angrier and more emotional."
Both Seccuros say they
love their alma mater, but they would not send their daughter to
UVA unless the school further improves its policies regarding sexual
assault.
"I want to change my opinion and say, 'yeah, I'd send
my daughter there,'" says Mike Seccuro. "I'd want to know that
she would feel comfortable coming forward, and she would be treated
appropriately."
And he'd like to say a few things to UVA
officials about his wife. "You didn't believe her 20 years
ago," he'd tell them. "Now let's talk."
A
convincing man?
Although Beebe refused requests for an interview,
in a Thanksgiving Day email he sent to Seccuro he offered his version of
the night in question, one that differs starkly from hers.
"You
had woken up from passing out early in the evening after the band had
started," he wrote. Around 3am, he recalled, he'd struck up a
conversation with her.
Then, he wrote, "I 'convinced' you after
what seemed like hesitation, that staying with me in my room upstairs
was better than walking all the way back to the suites. Of course,
seeing an opportunity to have a good time with you overrode any
gentlemanly efforts to return you safely back to the dorms."
His
roommate was away that night, and Beebe wrote that he and Seccuro began
kissing in his room with the door closed.
"There was no fight,
and it was all over in short order," he wrote. "When we awoke
in the morning it was still chilly out, so I lent you my jeans jacket,
and you walked home."
Beebe's Charlottesville attorney, Rhonda
Quagliana, says Beebe's version is the truth.
"It was a
too-much-to-drink college sex event," Quagliana says, "and it
was something that had plagued his conscience for a long
time."
When Beebe admitted the rape, Quagliana claims, he was
simply following the advice of another victim "who was trying to
help him understand where [Seccuro] was coming from and what her
thinking was."
When Beebe learned Seccuro was filing charges,
"It was a terrible shock for him because this is a man who was
trying to do the right thing," says Quagliana. "Unfortunately,
young people in college do things they regret. He was trying to
apologize for one of those things."
Quagliana promises that
details will emerge to exonerate her client. "This was bad behavior,
poor judgment, immature, and all those other things," says Quagliana,
"but it was not a rape."
Seccuro says that Beebe's refusal to
acknowledge the extreme violence that she recalls led to her decision to
file the criminal complaint.
And one AA member says she thinks Beebe
should come clean and accept whatever punishment comes his
way.
Making amends "can be an agonizing process," says
Barbara, an AA member (the organization asks its members not to use
their last names in the press). But "ideally," Barbara says,
"it can also be profoundly liberating."
No
statute
In many states, murder is the only crime with no statute
of limitations. But Virginia allows all felonies to be prosecuted
indefinitely, according to Chief Longo.
Seccuro says she wasn't sure
what she wanted to do after the first letter from Beebe. "I
actually felt bad for him for a while," she says. But as she
thought more about what he had done, her anger grew. So too did her wish
to see justice, not just for herself, she says, but for all women who
have been raped.
"I'm willing to put myself out here," she
says, "so that other women can see that you can come
forward."
In early December 2005, Seccuro returned to
Charlottesville to file her complaint with Charlottesville Police. She
turned over Beebe's letters and emails and met with detectives. They
visited the Phi Psi house and returned to Gwathmey dorm, where she lived
during her first year.
A week later, two Charlottesville detectives
flew to Las Vegas with a search warrant for Beebe's home and returned to
Virginia with his computer, which Seccuro says was sent to a state lab
for analysis.
Seccuro says authorities confirm that the ISP address
of the computer matches the emails.
At press time Beebe was
in custody in Las Vegas. Charlottesville Police detectives Nicholas
Rudman and Scott Godfrey did not return the Hook's calls, and
Commonwealth's Attorney Dave Chapman declines comment on the case, which
he calls an "ongoing investigation."
What's
fair?
In the days since Beebe's arrest, blogs have erupted with
questions over the wisdom of Beebe's actions. L.A.-based psychologist
and occasional 12-step critic Marc F. Kern says he's not surprised the
apology didn't go over well.
"I can see how that might really
open wounds for this woman and backfire on the perpetrator," Kern
says. "He didn't think this through, and his sponsors weren't
psychologically sophisticated."
But Quagliana says Beebe had no
way of knowing he was stepping into a legal minefield. "In his
case, he was acting on a sincere desire to say he was sorry for
something that was not a crime," she explains, "so he didn't
think he had anything to worry about."
Should Beebe be sentenced
to the maximum penalty rape carries, life in prison? Or should his
voluntary confession earn him leniency?
Apart from his use of the
word "rape," most of Beebe's correspondence on the specifics
of the fateful night downplays his culpability. Fliakos says he may be
telling it the way he recalls it, but in so doing he's not validating
Seccuro's experience.
"They both know she got hurt," says
Fliakos. "At this point, trying to convince her it was less than
she thought it was is moving away from the [purpose] of the Ninth
Step."
Seccuro says she has no opinion of what Beebe's legal
punishment should be, and says she had no choice but to turn the case
over to authorities.
"I rail against people who say this was a
youthful indiscretion. It's a felony," she says. "If you break
the law, you have to face the consequences.'
Twelve-step veteran
Barbara believes that even if, as in this case, making amends may
involve serving time in prison, Beebe may eventually be glad he
contacted his victim.
"One of our basic texts says, 'half
measures availed us nothing,'" Barbara explains. "I hope that
if he's guilty of what she says he is, that he'll go through with it all
the way. I think he'll be glad in the end that he did."
She also
thinks a judge will look favorably on Beebe's voluntary confession.
"If he tries to back out of it now," she says, "he'll
probably end up getting a stiffer sentence."
Whatever happens,
this case shines a harsh spotlight on AA's continuing practice of
encouraging its members to follow the words of Step Nine without getting
formal legal counseling. And although Beebe's apology didn't win the
result he may have hoped for, even 12-step critics see value in AA's
concept of making amends.
"It often is a helpful methodology," says
psychologist Kern. "It's not appropriate for everybody; it's not one
size fits all. And it was a wrong call here. On one level, though, I'm
pleased. He was arrested, and I don't support the concept of men raping
women."

Just one year ago, UVA
released revised-- and strengthened-- guidelines for dealing with sexual
assault on campus after a student, Annie Hylton, shared her story of
sexual assault on UVA grounds in the Hook's
November 11, 2004 cover story, "How UVA turns its back on
rape." A week after that story ran, more than 400 UVA students
participated in a silent protest against the university's polices
regarding sexual assault.

William N. Beebe in his
January 4 mugshot
COURTESY LAS VEGAS METROPOLITAN POLICE
DEPT.

In mid-December,
Seccuro came to Charlottesville to meet with police and file her
complaint against Beebe.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO

Liz Seccuro, then
known as Elizabeth Schimpf, in her 1987 Alpha Phi sorority
composite
COURTESY LIZ SECCURO

The Phi Psi
fraternity, at the north end of Mad Bowl, is the site of the alleged
rape.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO

In mid-December
when she was in Charlottesville, Seccuro turned down UVA President John
Casteen's offer to meet with her.
COURTESY UVA NEWS SERVICES/DAN
ADDISON

Charlottesville
Police Chief Tim Longo, flanked by Sergeant Richard Hudson, speaks to
reporters at a January 5 press conference announcing Beebe's
arrest.
PHOTO BY HAWES
SPENCER
#