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On Parade
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WorldNetDaily printer-friendly version of the article which follows.
Sunday, September 21, 2003
By
Jon Dougherty The Arkansas Supreme Court has upheld the 25-year sentence of a
man convicted of the homosexual rape and murder of a 13-year-old
boy.
The state's highest court on Thursday upheld a lower court ruling
which said a pair of statements made to police in September 1999 by
Joshua Macabe Brown shortly after his arrest should not be thrown
out.
Earlier, Benton County Circuit Judge David S. Clingler ruled
although he had ''serious doubts'' about tactics used by two
officers in questioning Brown after his arrest, he said there was
''no way'' he found anything Brown said was in response to any sort
of promises made by police, the Fort Smith, Ark. Times-Record
newspaper reported.
Brown could have received life in prison or the death penalty for
his role in the killing, which gained national prominence in
a column by WorldNetDaily founder and editor-in-chief Joseph
Farah.
Dirkhising was found by police unconscious on the floor of a
Prairie Grove, Ark. residence around 5 a.m. Sept. 26, 1999, his
hands bound with duct tape and his mouth gagged.
Police later determined Dirkhising had been repeatedly raped over
a period of hours, including with foreign objects, by Brown, then
22, and Davis Don Carpenter, then 38.
Police also said Dirkhising had been blindfolded and tied to a
mattress in the residence, and also had possibly been drugged during
the ordeal. And authorities said after the last rape he was left
bound and gagged while his attackers ate a sandwich. He died of
suffocation, a coroner's report found.
Carpenter, whom police say orchestrated the attack, pleaded
guilty and received a sentence of life in prison.
In his high court appeal, Brown argued police promised him he
could ''help himself'' by telling them what they wanted to know, the
Times-Record reported. But justices agreed the comments were vague
and non-specific, that Brown was of legal age when arrested and was
properly advised of his rights by police.
''We cannot say that Brown was so vulnerable that his statements
were involuntary, and it is apparent that the trial court did not
err in denying Brown’s motion to suppress these statements,'' said
Justice Tom Glaze, in the court's unanimous ruling.
Prosecutors had sought the death penalty in the case.
After his arrest, Carpenter had made statements to police about
homosexual fantasies involving young boys, said authorities –
statements the court later allowed, despite Carptenter's insistence
he made them before he was formally arrested for the crime.
News of the Dirkhising case was surprisingly muted throughout the
country, perhaps because it involved a homosexual crime, said WND
readers, who voted it one of the most spiked stories of 1999.
At one point, Farah took the Washington Post to task over it, and
most major newspaper's, lack of coverage of the case. In response
the Post's ombudsman, E.R. Shipp, blasted Farah and WND in a column
she penned defending her paper's decision to focus more attention on
the death of Matthew Shepard, a homosexual student who was murdered
in Wyoming in Oct. 1998.
Related stories:
Guilty
verdict in Dirkhising case
Death
penalty sought for 13-year-old's killers
Delay
sought in Dirkhising trial
Sex
fantasies evidence in Dirkhising trial
Related columns:
Jesse
Dirkhising's deliverance
Jon E. Dougherty is a
staff reporter and columnist for WorldNetDaily.
To view this item online, visit
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=34709
CRIMENETDAILY
Court upholds sentence in Jesse Dirkhising
case
Man convicted in homosexual rape,
murder of 13-year-old boy keeps 25-year prison term
Posted: September 21, 2003
1:00 a.m.
Eastern
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com
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