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			 Attorney Thomas Eoannou said he would request an independent 
			investigation "by a separate law enforcement agency into how this 
			breach could have possibly happened." 
			 
			He declined to speculate how the disclosure would affect the 
			investigation, but added: "If you're looking for a surefire way to 
			scuttle a prosecution, you may tamper with the evidence." 
			 
			Kane's accuser told police that Kane, a three-time Stanley Cup 
			champion with the Chicago Blackhawks and one of the National Hockey 
			League's top players, raped her in his lakeshore home in Hamburg, 
			New York, early on the morning of Aug. 2 after the two met at a 
			Buffalo nightclub. 
			 
			The 26-year-old Kane has not been charged with any crime and has 
			denied the accusation. 
			
			  The Buffalo News reported over the weekend that DNA evidence 
			gathered in the rape investigation did not confirm the woman's 
			allegation she was raped by Kane. His DNA was found beneath the 
			woman’s fingernails and on her shoulders, the News reported, 
			according to two sources, one of them identified as a member of law 
			enforcement. 
			 
			Kane’s attorney, Paul Cambria, told reporters on Wednesday that 
			tampering with evidence would only hurt Kane because the results 
			pointed to his exoneration. 
			 
			"The only one who might have an incentive to have the evidence 
			questioned is someone who is not pleased with the result," Cambria 
			said. 
			 
			Erie County Commissioner of Central Police Services John Glascott 
			said in a statement all evidence related to the case "is accounted 
			for and remains in its original packaging." 
			 
			"This includes the evidence in the rape kit and the packaging 
			itself. This evidence has been analyzed and reports of that analysis 
			sent to the appropriate agencies," the statement said. 
			 
			Erie County District Attorney Frank Sedita III did not immediately 
			respond to a request for comment. 
			 
			
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			Eoannou said the accuser's mother picked up the empty brown evidence 
			bag when she returned home from work for lunch on Tuesday, finding 
			it between her door and storm door. 
			 
			"We'd like to thank the person who anonymously placed the bag in the 
			doorway of her mother's residence," he told a news conference in 
			Buffalo. "But we would also like that person to come forward and 
			cooperate with authorities as to how on earth this could have 
			happened." 
			 
			Eoannou said the bag had the personal identifying information of the 
			woman and the initials of the nurses who administered the kit. 
			 
			He criticized media leaks over the past several weeks, saying the 
			reports of DNA evidence had been "devastating to my client." 
			 
			"This is a classic example of why rape victims don't come forward," 
			Eoannou said. "This is the worst example of victim bashing that I 
			have seen." 
			 
			Kane's attorney, Cambria, told reporters: "The victim has not been 
			determined in this case. I think my client is the victim." 
			 
			(Reporting by Steve Ginsburg in Washington; Editing by Peter Cooney) 
			
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