ABC News has broken the big news of the day on Kobe Bryant, getting someone in law enforcement or the prosecution team to outline the sexual assault case against the Lakers guard:
Sources told ABCNEWS that Bryant, 24, and the alleged victim met when he checked into the Lodge & Spa at Cordillera in Edwards, Colo., on June 30, and she gave him a tour of the facility. Bryant called the front desk from his room and asked for the woman and she went up to his room.Sources said the alleged victim was in Bryant's room for less than half an hour. There was some consensual contact between Bryant and his accuser, but the woman says she did not consent to intercourse. She sustained some physical injuries, sources said, which Eagle County prosecutors are expected to argue are indicative of sexual assault. . .
In addition, sources said, prosecutors are expected to argue that Bryant deceived law enforcement officials and that he gave inconsistent statements. Bryant's defense has said that he has been forthcoming and cooperative with law enforcement officials and stressed that he flew back to Colorado to surrender to authorities there in his July 4 arrest.
In an unsigned editorial, the Rocky Mountain News is calling Eagle County Judge Frederick Gannett's "decorum order" dictating the rules of media conduct during the case as "unconstitutional." A piece by USA Today's Tom Kenworthy buttresses the same claim.
For those so inclined, here's a link to a PDF copy of the actual felony complaint against Bryant.
UPDATE Dahlia Lithwich, Slate's Supreme Court correspondent, has written an interesting history of rape law, and how all the changes haven't made it any easier to determine guilt or innocence:
We have reformed, rewritten, and rejiggered rape law, but it is still fundamentally not "fair" in the sense of providing any real legal certainty. In the end



I haven’t followed the Kobe story at all, because I’m just not that interested. That I know as much about it as I do is a testament to the waves it’s making throughout media.
In any case, I got this interesting take on it, from a reporting/semantic viewpoint:
http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=1&aid=41999
You may want to check out this blog:
http://www.talkleft.com/
“Liberal coverage of crime-related political and injustice news”
Anyhoo, the author is a lefty lawyer in Denver who specializes in criminal stuff.
There is some good info on the Kobe case there from a more learned point of view than you would get from you average sports fan. There are 18 Kobe posts and counting, dating back to July 7.