




Jesse was only 13 years old in Sept 1999 when he was allegedly tied up with duct tape by a pair of homosexual men, drugged, blindfolded, gagged with his own underwear, tortured and repeatedly raped by one of the men while the other man watched. Jesse died. Why has the media kept this quiet? Read Story below!!!
(Below news item taken from: http://www.washingtontimes.com/nation/nation1.html on Sunday, October 24, 1999) __________________________________________________ Media
tune out torture death of Arkansas boy The brutal crime
against Prairie Grove, Ark., seventh-grader Jesse
Dirkhising -- who was raped repeatedly and suffocated
with his own underwear in the pre-dawn hours of Sept. 26
-- was reported by news organizations in Arkansas and
also covered by newspapers in Oklahoma and Tennessee. Tim Graham,
director of media analysis for the Media Research Center,
said he is not surprised. Christopher D.
Plumlee, deputy prosecuting attorney for Benton County,
Ark., who investigated Jesse's death, admits he was a
"little surprised" at the limited coverage this
"horrible crime against a child" received. The accused
killers pleaded not guilty at an arraignment earlier this
month and face another court date Dec. 8. Mr. Plumlee
said their trial is scheduled for April 10, 2000. The prosecutor
said the child's family had been falsely told Jesse
helped out at a Rogers beauty salon Mr. Carpenter
managed. According to the affidavit, Mr. Brown told police that on the morning of Sept. 26, he sneaked up on the boy, tied his hands behind his back, placed his pair of undershorts in the teen's mouth and secured the briefs with a bandana and duct tape. He said he blindfolded the youth, bound him to a bed and repeatedly sodomized him.
Asked about Mr.
Carpenter's role during the crime, Mr. Brown said Mr.
Carpenter stood at the bedroom door and masturbated as he
watched. Police also recovered notes they believe
implicate Mr. Carpenter in planning the crime. Mr. Plumlee would
not speculate on why this slaying received such scant
coverage. But "this was murder and rape in an area
that has a low crime rate, a particularly low rate of
violent crime. We generally don't have crimes with this
degree of brutality here," he said. News stories
published about the crime, to date, have not indicated
the suspects are homosexuals. AP last covered
the story Oct. 11, when the two suspects were arraigned. The next day,
Oct. 10, AP produced a 700-word story with the headline:
"Gay student clings to life after savage
beating." On Oct. 11, AP moved a 500-word story
headlined: "Call for tougher laws after attack on
gay student." A search through Associated Press
on-line archives showed the Shepard story was reported as
a national story every day for a week following the
beating. Barbara Levinson,
a spokeswoman for "NBC Nightly News," said,
"We did not cover" the Dirkhising case. Given
that the broadcast is only 30 minutes long, she said,
"There are many crime stories that don't make it on
the air." A spokeswoman for
CNN said, "Our affiliate station in Atlanta was
tracking the story. But the week it happened, there was
also Hurricane Floyd, the nuclear power plant explosion
in Japan, the London train wreck, and the flare-up in
East Timor." Paul McMasters,
national ombudsman for the Freedom Forum, a private media
foundation, acknowledged he had not heard about the
Dirkhising murder until Thursday when a reporter called
and inquired. "I'm at a loss to explain why a story
like this didn't get more national play," he said.
"We don't know how many stories just like this one
don't make it to the national news." One person
angered that the Jesse Dirkhising killing has not
received wider coverage is former Louisiana state
lawmaker David Duke, the one-time Ku Klux Klan leader who
describes himself as a "national white civil rights
activist." "There has
been no outrage and no candlelight vigils for Jesse
Dirkhising," even though the murder was "even
more heinous than the Shepard case because the victim was
a child who was literally raped to death by two male
homosexuals," said Mr. Duke. But Mr. Smith of Human Rights Campaign countered: "This is a desperate political ploy and a comeback attempt by a failed neo-Nazi, who hasn't won a major election since he was elected Grand Wizard." ___________________________________________________ (The news item below is taken from: http://www.smu.edu/~deathpen/updates.html:)
ARKANSAS: The 2 men arrested Sunday in connection with the murder of a 13-year- old Prairie Grove boy in Rogers were ordered held without bond Monday, and Prosecuting Attorney Brad Butler said he will seek the death penalty in the capital-murder case. "This is a very brutal and horrific crime, and we will be seeking the death penalty," Butler said after a hearing in Benton County Circuit Court. "We're ready to go, ready to file charges. Our hearts go out to the victim's family. No one deserves to lose a child in this manner."v Joshua Macave Brown, 22, and Davis Don Carpenter, 38, were in court Monday for a probable-cause hearing in connection with the murder of Jesse Dirkhising.v Dirkhising was found near death at the home of the 2 men at in Rogers, police said. Dirkhising was taken by ambulance to St. Marys Hospital in Rogers, where he was pronounced dead at 5:32 a.m. Brown stood staring at the floor for most of his court appearance. Carpenter, who was seated in the jury box, had been in the courtroom for some time reading the affidavit detailing the charges against him. As he read, Carpenter repeatedly shook his head and muttered, "No." Members of Dirkhising's family sat weeping, and one woman, identified as the boy's mother, clutched a teddy bear and a framed photograph. At Monday's hearing in Bentonville, Circuit Judge David Clinger agreed to consider a request to seal parts of the affidavit of probable cause, detailing the accusations against the men. Charles Duell, the public defender representing Brown, said publication of the information could prevent the defendants from receiving a fair trial. A hearing on that motion was set for 1:30 p.m. today. Clinger allowed an edited version to be released, and Butler, along with Rogers Police Chief Tim Keck and Sgt. Terry Woodside, discussed the information that investigators have gathered about the events leading to the boy's death. According to Butler, Dirkhising had known Brown and Carpenter for several months and had been spending weekends at their residence in Rogers. According to the affidavit, the family believed the boy had been working at a hair-styling shop where Carpenter worked. Police received a 911 emergency call placed from the residence at 4:53 a.m. Sunday. When police officers and a Rogers Fire Department ambulance arrived, a man later identified as Carpenter met them. Carpenter, described as very upset, repeatedly told the officers, "He's not breathing." Dirkhising was found on the floor of a bedroom with duct tape around one wrist. When asked about the tape, Brown reportedly told officers they were just playing a game. While being questioned at the scene, Brown allegedly assaulted Cpl. Rick Simmons and was arrested. Butler said Monday that the boy had been raped repeatedly over a period of hours, including with foreign objects. While the rapes were occurring, Butler said, the boy was bound with duct tape at his ankles, knees and wrists and also was gagged and blindfolded. Butler also said there is some evidence the boy was drugged, and a quantity of a sedative known as amitryptiline was found at the residence. Police found quantities of other drugs, including suspected methamphetamine, along with items commonly used in sexual bondage. Notes making reference to various sex acts and the use of pills and duct tape also were found at the residence. Butler said the 2 men raped Dirkhising at least 6 times. Each was charged with 6 counts of rape in addition to capital murder. Butler said the boy was left bound and gagged after the last rape while the 2 men went to get a sandwich to eat. When the men returned, Butler said, they found the boy, apparently dead, and made the 911 emergency call. (source: The Morning News) |






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