Posted on 09/30/2002 3:27:34 PM PDT by Saundra Duffy
Permissive Parenting Contributed to Killing of Jesse Dirkhising - Parents didnt mind him spending time with homosexual men - By Allyson Smith
Jesse Dirkhising 7th grade yearbook photo Lincoln Middle School Second of two parts
The following is the second of a two-part article commemorating the third anniversary of the sadistic rape-killing of Jesse Dirkhising, a 13-year-old boy from Prairie Grove, Arkansas, on September 26, 1999. Young Jesse was found near death at the apartment of 33-year-old family friend and hairdresser Davis Carpenter, after a night of grotesque sodomitic abuse at the hands of Carpenters 22-year-old homosexual lover, Joshua Brown. (Carpenter used notes to guide Brown in the sadistic rituals.) For the sake of decency, many of the gruesome details surrounding the killing of Jesse had to be edited out of this and last weeks article. (A fuller, more graphic, version of this piece is available on WorldNetDaily.com, published September 23, 2002.) The Web site of Americans for Truth also contains more information on the Dirkhising case.
* * *
Joshua Brown was tried and convicted on charges of capital murder and rape of 13-year-old Jesse Dirkhising in March 2001 and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
During the trial, prosecutors called nearly 25 witnesses and presented more than 100 items of evidence, including nylon rope, petroleum jelly jars, a douche bottle, crumpled duct tape, feces- and vomit-covered shirts and underwear, prescription pill bottles, and photos of items that were used to sodomize the child, according to news reports.
Police also confiscated several notes that Davis Carpenter, Browns accomplice and older homosexual lover, wrote describing how to sedate and sodomize children (both Jesse and a neighborhood girl).
One three-page note, addressed to "Baby," Carpenters pet name for Brown, contained a graphic sexual assault fantasy about a little neighbor girl: "I saw your 10-year-old blonde whore this morning. ... Her bus comes by at 7:20 or 7:30."
"Keep an eye on her to catch the first opportunity to talk to her In the back window & whammo! Oh yeah!"
Benton County Circuit Court Judge David Clinger, who presided over Browns trial, called the written accounts of bondage, drugging, gagging and blindfolding "a blueprint for child rape."
JESSES POLITICALLY CORRECT PARENTS During cross examination at the trial, evidence came to light that Jesses parents had permissive attitudes toward homosexuality and drug use and the fact that Jesse was hanging out with older homosexual lovers.
"[Jesses mother] Tina Yates, to our shock and dismay, testified on cross-examination that she was well aware that Carpenter and Brown were homosexuals and had no issue with them or homosexuality in general," said Robert C. Balfe, the lead prosecuting attorney for Benton County, Arkansas, in a post-conviction interview with C&F Report.
"If Jesse wanted to be a homosexual, that was fine with her. In fact, a homosexual minister had married her and Jesses stepfather, Miles Yates. Tina considered Carpenter and Brown family and they all spent considerable time together at each others residences."
Miles Yates reiterated his wifes testimony that he was aware that Carpenter and Brown were homosexuals and drug users but said those facts didnt bother him "so long as it was not around the family," and stated that he was not averse to using drugs "at home with me or someone youre comfortable with."
He also testified that he had met Carpenter about seven years prior to his stepsons death via his own friendship with a homosexual lover of Carpenters and that he would allow only "a decent person an upstanding citizen" to watch Jesse or his siblings overnight.
"This testimony was so out-of-step with any reasonable persons views on family that it alienated [Tina], and by default, Jesse, from the jury," Balfe said.
A 14-year-old female friend of Jesses also testified that Jesse had been seen the week prior to his death being injected with methamphetamine by a 43-year-old female neighbor of Browns and Carpenters, unsupervised by either of the men.
GRANDMOTHER TOLD TO MIND OWN BUSINESS One family member who was not comfortable with Jesses friendship with the two homosexuals was his step-grandmother, Betty Yates.
In a 1999 interview with CNSNews.com, Yates said, "The parents put him in a situation he shouldnt have been in. They knowingly let him spend weekends with the two guys knowing they were gay. Jesse was a typical 13-year-old good kid. You do not put a 13-year-old child into a situation like that. It had been going on for about two months and he had told them he did not want to go back."
Betty Yates told CNSNews.com that some months prior to Jesses death, Tina Yates said she was excited that the gay couple had taken an interest in her son.
"I said, Do they not have kids? And she said, Well, theyre two guys, theyre gay. When they left, I said to my husband, Do you know what theyre doing? But hes real big on minding your own business. Now Im sorry I didnt pursue it. We shouldnt have minded our own business that time. It was a horrible death that could have been prevented."
Balfe, the prosecutor, told C&F Report, "It was extremely important to me that the jury stay focused on the real issue of the trial, the rape and murder of Jesse, and not be distracted by any side issues, such as whether this case was the subject of a conspiracy by the national media to hide homosexual hate crimes.
"Jesse was not attacked because he was heterosexual, he was attacked because he was a child. The defendants were pedophiles and had an unnatural desire to engage in the violent rape of children," he said. "I have my personal opinions on whether homosexuality is a sexual deviance that makes other types of sexual deviance such as pedophilia more likely to occur among homosexuals, but that is separate and apart from my prosecution of this crime."
Balfe said that the defendants homosexual conduct was "self-evident" and added, "I didnt stay away from the homosexual angle in this case to be politically correct."
FAMILY BREAKDOWN LED TO TROUBLES Teen pregnancy, divorce, fatherlessness and childhood abuse all played a part in the Jesse Dirkhising tragedy.
Jesses and Joshua Browns mothers were both 17 when they gave birth to their sons. "Both mothers had their children too young, and both failed to nurture and protect," said public defender Louis Lim. Carpenters parents were also divorced.
Browns mother, Judith Wasson of Memphis, Tennessee, testified that Browns father had abandoned the family when Joshua was two years old.
Wasson said that her son had been in and out of foster homes in California and Tennessee between the ages of 9 and 11 because of physical abuse and neglect at her own hands. She also stated that her brother, who had moved into their home as a "male figure" for the family, had physically abused Joshua and sexually abused his younger sister, Jessica.
When her son Joshua was 20, Wasson said, he met Carpenter in Memphis while on the rebound after breaking up with a girlfriend.
"I did not know Josh had any homosexual tendencies until after he was arrested," she said.
Under questioning by Detective Jarod Mason, Brown admitted that he was bisexual.
VULNERABLE BOYS: EASY GAY PREY Defense attorney Louis Lim said that Brown was a troubled, insecure teen with drug addictions when Carpenter walked into his life in 1997.
"A successful hairstylist, Carpenter was a keynote speaker at Browns sisters graduation from modeling school in Mississippi. Carpenter befriended Brown and offered him a job," reported the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
When Carpenter saw Brown for the first time, "he said he [Brown] was so pretty he needed someone to lift him up," Lim told jurors.
Within two months of knowing Brown, Carpenter persuaded Brown to move away from his friends and family to Florida. Davis later manipulated Josh into a homosexual relationship by stating that four characters in the Bible (David and Jonathan, and Ruth and Naomi) were homosexual.
As he did with Brown, Carpenter worked to isolate Jesse from his family, Lim said.
Co-workers from the Regis hair salon characterized Carpenter as the stronger of the two personalities in the relationship with Brown, and said he tended to be domineering, condescending and sure of himself.
They generally described Brown as more like a teenager than a mature 22-year-old. One witness noted that Brown would generally stare at the ground in front of himself rather than looking people in the eyes, a trait evident in police transcripts and trial photographs.
Carpenter wrote housekeeping instructions to Brown and, in one note, described their relationship as "a beautiful marriage"!
JESSES LIFE DEVALUED BY KILLERS, JURORS In closing arguments, Prosecutor Balfe said that making a late-night run for more duct tape, picking up only two sandwiches instead of three, and leaving the child unattended all proved that Carpenter and Brown werent concerned about Jesses welfare.
Balfe also described to C&F Report the difficulty of convincing the court that Jesses rape was non-consensual: "I repeatedly kept telling the jury that there is no way a 13-year-old boy is going to agree to being bound, gagged with dirty underwear, and raped with numerous different objects over five hours," he said.
"The defenses response was essentially: Well, I know its hard to understand, but you never know what these homosexuals are going to do." Balfe said that a similar comment was made in the jury room.
"If this was a 13-year-old girl, there would be absolutely no issue that it was not consensual. Yet since Jesse was a boy, this was somehow understandable. It must have been kinky sex."
Balfe told C&F Report that Jesses disadvantaged background fueled jurors beliefs that the teenager had consented to the assault: "The defense certainly devalued the victim along [socio-economic] lines. If the 13-year-old had been the son of a Wal-Mart executive (Wal-Mart is headquartered here in Bentonville), then I believe we would have had a different outcome.
"Thats why pedophiles target children from disadvantaged homes. First, theyre more likely to be successful in luring these children because the parents arent as vigilant. Second, juries then punish the victim because the parents are unsympathetic."
JESSE LOVED BY FAMILY, CLASSMATES During the penalty phase of Browns trial, members of Jesses families made statements to the court telling how much Jesse had meant to them and arguing for the maximum punishment for Joshua Brown.
According to local news reports, Jesses maternal grandmother, Paula McVey, fought back tears as she told jurors how much she and her remaining grandchildren missed Jesse.
McVey testified that Jesses little brother and sister, Chad and Renea Kidd, had been very close to their older brother. She said that Chad, then 9 years old, frequently cried out, "I want my brother!" and that Renea, 8, had become extremely dependent upon her remaining brother and broke into tears when separated from him for any length of time.
Chad wrote a statement to the court saying that he missed drawing and playing football, baseball, soccer and basketball with Jesse.
"Im mad," wrote Chad. "I want to hurt someone. I feel like there is a very big whole [sic] in me." Chad added that he hoped Brown and Carpenter would get the death penalty.
Tina Yates wrote that Jesse loved to read and play football for his school and that he liked camping, fishing and hunting with his siblings, and going to movies with his grandmother. She said her sons dream was to finish school, get his mechanics certification and make a living repairing automobiles.
Browns mother, Judith Wasson, told the court tearfully, "We are profoundly sorry for the loss that the Yates family is having. I know in my heart that Joshua could not have intentionally killed anyone."
Jesses classmates at Lincoln Middle School placed flowers on his school bus seat and memorialized his locker after his death.
JUDGE DID NOT BUY BROWNS EXCUSE Judge David Clinger rejected the contention that Brown tried to save Jesse by cutting away duct tape and trying to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Trial testimony showed that Carpenter and Brown contemplated cleaning Jesse in the shower or dumping his body somewhere else before Carpenter called 911.
"I absolutely dont find a single shred of evidence that Mr. Carpenter ever forced you to do anything that you didnt want to do," Judge Clinger said.
"You and Davis Carpenter had quite a time inflicting this on this bound and helpless young man who was barely 13. Imagining Jesses thought process during his slow and torturous death has sent shivers up my spine," Clinger told Brown.
Despite Clingers contention that Joshua willingly participated in Jesses assault, juror Milton Davis said, "Very often, we felt we were trying the wrong man."
CARPENTER COPS PLEA Davis Carpenters trial, originally scheduled for May 2001, was averted after he pleaded guilty on April 18, 2001 to one count each of capital murder and rape in exchange for serving life in prison without possibility of parole.
At his sentencing, Carpenter admitted his culpability in Jesse s death and apologized to Jesses mother and stepfather: "Id like to say to Miles and Tina that Im sorry Jesses gone. I tried to save him but couldnt. Every day I pray for them and I will continue to pray for the rest of my life that the Lord will heal the hole in their heart."
While acknowledging that Carpenters crimes were terrible, Judge Clinger said he found no evidence that either Carpenter or Brown intended to kill Jesse, persuading him to accept the plea bargain.
Carpenters father later told The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that his son accepted partial blame for Jesses murder. "He knew the boys family didnt have much money and gave him a job at the salon. But he has admitted that he probably shouldnt have ever had the boy in that apartment."
Balfe summarized the case to C&F Report as follows: "I believe that this unfortunate 13-year-old boy, raised in a home with the [types of views that Miles and Tina Yates espoused], was left to be lured by these two pedophiles who could induce him with money and drugs. I believe they wanted Jesse to become addicted to drugs to make him more likely to follow their commands."
Spokesmen for homosexual pressure groups like the Human Rights Campaign deplored Jesses murder, even as they said it has nothing to do with "gays."
WHATS NEW IN 2002? According to Northwest Arkansas News reports from this year, Browns case has been appealed to the Arkansas Supreme Court. However, the appeal is currently languishing due to personnel and workload issues within the Benton County Public Defenders Office.
Two months after his murder conviction, Carpenter filed a handwritten motion to withdraw his guilty plea. On July 11, 2001, Carpenter filed another petition for post-conviction relief, claiming that his attorneys were ineffective.
On July 11 of this year, Judge Clinger refused Carpenters requests, saying that neither request was signed and notarized as required by law.
No local memorials have been held since Jesses death, according to NWAonline.net reporter Kirby Sanders, who covered the case.
A recent search on the Nexis online database of news and print articles shows a total of 669 articles about Jesse Dirkhising versus 11,948 for slain homosexual college student Matthew Shepard, using the search phrase "All News Stories."
Cards and letters may be sent to Jesses family at the following address:
Dirkhising/Yates Family c/o Benton County Prosecutors Office 100 NE "A" Street Bentonville, AR 72712
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Culture and Family Institute an affiliate of Concerned Women for America 1015 Fifteenth St. N.W., Suite 1102 Washington, D.C. 20005 Phone: (202) 289-7117 Fax: (202) 488-0806 E-mail: mail@cultureandfamily.org
God bless Dixie!
The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide
Jason Tangeman began by agreeing that Aaron McKinney participated in the death of Matthew Shepard, but argued that his client did not premeditate the murder. Matt Shepard died because of five minutes of emotional rage and chaos caused by McKinneys methamphetamine use and an abusive background that included unwanted gay sex.
Thus, McKinneys voluntary intoxication, a legal defense in Wyoming, showed that he could not form the specific intent to commit first degree murder. According to the defenses account, Matt Shepard left the Fireside Lounge voluntarily with McKinney and Henderson, looking for a sexual encounter. Shepard had already been rebuffed by one man at the bar. McKinney and Henderson were friendly, and even though Shepards car was parked outside, he asked them for a ride home. Seated between the two in the cab of their pick-up truck, Shepard leaned over, grabbed McKinneys crotch and licked his ear. McKinney reacted with uncontrollable rage and began beating him.
Soon thereafter, McKinney and Henderson left Shepard tied to a fence and took his shoes to make it difficult for him to walk back to town. McKinney didnt think he had beaten Matt Shepard to death; why else would he take his shoes?
Soon thereafter, McKinney and Henderson left Shepard tied to a fence and took his shoes to make it difficult for him to walk back to town.
Tangeman then summarized his case and revealed what would soon grab headlines as the gay panic defense:
The average citizen might understand one mans reaction to the sexual advance of another man. Drugs enhance that reaction. But Aaron McKinneys reactions were even further intensified because he had had sexually traumatic and confusing events in his life. As a child, a neighborhood bully forced McKinney to suck his penis. The bully mocked him, calling him gay. At fifteen, Aaron engaged in gay sex with a cousin. These events traumatized McKinney. In Florida, he and Kristen Price mistakenly went to a gay church, and Aaron left abruptly, sobbing. The gay advance by Matthew Shepard humiliated McKinney in front of Henderson, and then enraged him. McKinney struck out in rage. Not only did drugs and alcohol affect Aaron McKinney that night, but so did his past.
First of Two Parts
[WARNING: STORY CONTAINS SOME GRAPHIC DESCRIPTIONS]
As the third anniversary of Jesse Dirkhisings death (September 26) approaches, interviews with the prosecutor who tried the Arkansas boys homosexual murderers and information gleaned from Northwest Arkansas local news reports shed new light on factors that led to the tragedy.
News of 13-year-old Jesses gruesome sadomasochistic killing ignited an outcry among conservatives and pro-family advocates who questioned why the case received only a small fraction of the media coverage devoted to the murder of Matthew Shepard a "gay" Wyoming college student a year earlier. A Nexis media database search reveals 13,500 total stories on the name "Matthew Shepard" and 632 for "Jesse Dirkhising." That does not include the massive TV coverage of the Shepard case, including two major Hollywood specials. Meanwhile, Dirkhising has been largely forgotten.
The following account is deeply disturbing. We included only enough detail to highlight the nature of the crime. However, we left many facts out due to their extreme graphic nature; a fuller version will be made available through Americans for Truth, a pro-family organization that opposes the homosexual movement.
There is an aspect of Jesses killing that was almost completely ignored by the conservative and "mainstream" media: that it flowed from the almost unthinkable depravities practiced most prominently by homosexual male sadists. Interestingly, the group now known euphemistically in "gay" circles as the "leather community" protests that it practices "consensual," controlled sexually violent behavior and disavows child abuse. Nevertheless, it celebrates pain, degradation and torturous acts of the sort that lit the perverse fantasies of Jesses older killer, Davis Carpenter, and ultimately snuffed out young Jesse.
Both Carpenter and his younger homosexual lover, Joshua Brown, are serving life-without-parole sentences in Arkansas jails. Next weeks article will report on some of the lessons learned from his killing. Editor
By Allyson Smith
Thirteen-year-old Jesse Dirkhising suffocated to death during the early morning hours of September 26, 1999, after being bound, drugged, gagged and brutally sodomized by "gay" lovers Davis Don Carpenter, then 38, and Joshua Macabe Brown, then 22, at the mens apartment in Rogers, Arkansas.
Earlier that summer, Jesse with the permission of his mother and stepfather, Tina and Miles Yates had begun spending weekends with the homosexual couple. His parents knew the two adult men were homosexual lovers.
Carpenter, who had known Miles Yates for several years and was considered a "family friend," made a 60-mile round trip on weekends to pick up Jesse at his trailer park home in Prairie Grove and take him back to Rogers, where he earned $45 helping to sweep the Regis Hairstylists beauty salon that Carpenter managed. Jesse planned to use the money to fix up a truck.
During the five-hour assault, which began around midnight in the couples bedroom, Brown, acting on written instructions from Carpenter, bound the seventh-grader with nylon rope, placed a T-shirt blindfold over his head, and gagged his mouth with a pair of underwear secured by a bandana and duct tape.
After propping pillows beneath Jesses abdomen, Brown sodomized him a variety of ways, including with an enema laced with the sedative drug amitryptiline while Carpenter (engaging in a lewd act) watched in the bedroom doorway.
Midway through the assault, Carpenter went to an all-night grocery store to purchase additional rape implements.
Upon Carpenters return from the store, Brown continued sodomizing Jesse. He then left the room to eat a sandwich. When he returned, the boy was no longer breathing. Frantic, he woke Carpenter, who by that time had fallen asleep on the living room sofa.
After the men attempted unsuccessfully to administer CPR, Carpenter called 911. When police arrived at the apartment, they found Jesse naked and near death on the bedroom floor. His face was blue, according to reports. We are unable to report other details about the crime scene due to their horrific nature.
Jesse was pronounced dead after being rushed to nearby St. Marys hospital. Medical Examiner Dr. Stephen Erickson later testified that the boy died as a result of "suffocation, positional asphyxiation and acute amitryptiline intoxication."
KILLER CONFESSIONS - Under questioning by Detective Martha Armstrong, Davis Carpenter denied any participation in Jesses assault. However, a grocery clerk at the Price Cutter store where Carpenter bought the food items later testified that he "was wide awake when he came into the store" and that he was "pretty happy" about finding the duct tape on a low shelf, according to The Benton County Daily Record.
Carpenter admitted to police he had used several drugs in the hours leading up to the assault, including methamphetamine.
After his arrest, Carpenter told Benton County jail inmates that he participated in Jesse's sodomy by "shoving pain pills" down the boy's throat, according to a police affidavit.
In the taped interview, Carpenter also said he had "counseled" Jesse about his sexuality and drug use: "If he wanted to bring in a 28-year-old woman and [have sex with her] in the back room, I wouldnt care. As long as he was there and he told me about it and was honest about everything I asked him about the thing he was doing.
"Just like I told him, If you want to smoke pot thats fine. You can smoke it in my house but dont you go out there with the rest of these d--- crazy kids because theyre not good people."
"Jesses confused," continued Carpenter. "Jesse is attracted to guys and hates that part of himself." He said that Jesses mother, Tina Yates, had mentioned Jesses homosexuality to him.
Carpenter said on tape that he left home at age 15 because of his own homosexuality: "My dad didnt, my whole family didnt think fags deserved to live."
However, his father later accepted him. In an April 2001 interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Davis Carpenter Sr. said that his son "came home one day and proceeded to tell me he was gay. We sat up and talked for a long time that night. I saw that I couldn't change his mind. So I accepted it."
Carpenter denied that he and Brown practiced any bondage in their sexual relationship. However, he told Armstrong that Brown and Jesses "play" included "mummy type stuff" where "theyve taped each other like a mummy." ("Mummification" is one of many sadistic sex rituals.)
In his police confession, Joshua Brown said he and Jesse "were just playing around." He said they often hog-tied each other and that the young teenager was a willing participant in their "games."
Brown called Jesse his "on-the-side lover" and said that the boy had performed unsolicited oral sex on him during his first weekend visit. However, Brown insisted he had never had anal sex with Jesse until the fatal assault.
Brown said he didnt know that the "game" would kill Jesse. In his taped confession, Brown stamped the table several times with his fist in apparent remorse and said, "I just don't believe I [expletive deleted] killed him."
Brown also told police that "Davis gots [sic] a whole slew of videos" that are "mostly guy-on-guy [porn films]," but he was not sure if they had arrived yet from the couples previous residence in St. Petersburg, Florida.
When asked by Detective Jarod Mason if Carpenter ever fantasized about "little kids," Brown answered, "Sometimes, yeah" but denied that Carpenter would ever act on them.
Joshua also said that Davis "had fantasies about dogs" and would draw pictures of bondage acts.
Later, Brown told Mason, "Jesse really didnt have nothing to offer except maybe sex every now and then."
Culture and Family Institute an affiliate of Concerned Women for America 1015 Fifteenth St. N.W., Suite 1102 Washington, D.C. 20005 Phone: (202) 289-7117 Fax: (202) 488-0806 E-mail: mail@cultureandfamily.org
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.