Copperfield rape probe closed
US prosecutors closed a two-year rape investigation involving magician David Copperfield today without filing any charges, and police said his accuser made a false sex assault claim against another man last month.
The illusionistâs lawyers, Angelo Calfo and Patty Eakes, previously said he denied the allegations and called the lawsuit âextortion for money, plain and simpleâ but they had no immediate comment on todayâs decision.
The end of the federal investigation came in a brief court filing by Assistant US Attorney Susan Roe.
The US attorneyâs office in Seattle declined to discuss its reasons, but, in a written statement, spokeswoman Emily Langlie said that, generally, investigations may be closed without charges if prosecutors determine there is no federal jurisdiction, no federal laws were broken, or that it would be impossible to prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt.
âNeither the investigation, nor its termination, should be perceived as a comment on guilt or innocence,â the statement said.
The woman who made the complaint, a 23-year-old fashion model, waitress and former Miss Washington contestant, said in a related civil lawsuit against Copperfield that she met him when he pulled her out of the crowd and on to the stage during a performance in Kennewick, in south-eastern Washington. She was later invited to visit his private island in the Bahamas in July 2007.
The woman claimed that, once she arrived, Copperfield, whose real name is David Kotkin, sexually assaulted her, in one instance holding her head under water to coerce her.
âShe is disappointed, but it wasnât completely unexpected given the jurisdictional issue of prosecuting him here for something that happened on his private island,â said a lawyer for the woman.
Bellevue Police records indicate that Copperfieldâs accuser made false sexual assault allegations against another man last month.
Police referred the matter to prosecutors for potential charges of prostitution and making a false or misleading statement to a public servant.
According to the investigation reports, the woman was working as a server at a restaurant and decided to meet a customer for drinks on December 2.
She and another woman met the man, but before long the other woman left â later telling police it was because the other two had become so affectionate towards each other that it was making her uncomfortable.
Copperfieldâs accuser and the other man rented a hotel room, and surveillance images included in the police records showed them kissing and cuddling in the lobby.
The woman later left the hotel room and told hotel staff the man took advantage of her, the police documents said. She said she was dizzy and could not remember what happened, but awoke to find him on top of her, police said.
But the man also called police, saying she left the room and falsely accused him to the staff because he refused to pay her $2,000 (âŹ1,400) for sex.
The womanâs lawyer said she believed the police report was âoverblownâ.
âIâm fully aware that Copperfieldâs lawyers are trying to shine a light on her instead of what he did and his modus operandi of luring young girls to his private island,â she said.