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Find and write your own
neighborhood news every day
at courier-journal.com/
louisville-neighborhoods
he files detailing the investigation of Jessica Dis-
hons murder sit in neat piles in a cinder-block
room at the Bullitt County Sheriffs Office.
On a recent day, there was a note atop the files
a new tip.
I cant saythe leads have runout, saidLarryCarroll, a
former homicide detective who is a part-time consultant
onthe case for the sheriffs office. But the investigationis
very slow at this point.
Hethenpickedupthenote, decliningtodiscuss its con-
tents.
Thursday marked the 10th anniversary of the disap-
pearance of 17-year-old Jessica, who was later found dead
not far fromher homebut despitethemanyyears, Jessi-
cas family, as well as David Bucky Brooks, the neighbor
oncechargedwithher murder, saytheyarestill hungryfor
a resolution.
Its just like a standstill, said Jessicas mother, Edna
Dishon. I think it would be easier if there was justice
done.
Jessicas family and friends gathered for a candlelight
vigil by her grave Thursday night.
Her gravelists her dateof deathas Sept. 10, 1999, but her
For 10 years, Jessica Dishons murder in Bullitt County
has gone unsolved; her family is still seeking ...
Justice for Jessica
By Pam Spaulding, The Courier-Journal
Jessica Dishons family held a vigil at her grave Thursday on the
10th anniversary of her disappearance. Her mother, Edna
Dishon, center, talked about her daughter while her sister,
Regina Thurman, left, and her husband, Mike Dishon, listened.
By Matt Stone, The Courier-Journal
A picture of Jessica Dishon in her ROTC uniform
sits in the Dishon familys living room.
By Emily Hagedorn
ehagedorn@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
See JESSICA, A2, col. 1
BROOKS INTERVIEW, TIMELINE
Watch a video of David Bucky Brooks recent
interview at courier-journal.com/bullitt
Go to courier-journal.com/bullitt for a timeline
of the Dishon murder case and see photos of
Thursdays vigil.
CALL IN YOUR TIPS
If you have any tips on what happened to Jessica,
call the anonymous tip line at 543-1262.
T
ALouisville-basedconservationgroupanda national pres-
ervation organization have filed a federal lawsuit asking that
plans to build two Ohio River bridges be reconsidered ac-
tionthat couldhalt progress ona project already years behind
schedule.
The suit seeks a newevaluation of the Ohio River Bridges
Project, claiming the Federal Highway Administration broke
environmental and transportation laws while planning the
$4.1 billion project.
River Fields and the National Trust for Historic Preserva-
tionare asking the court to throwout the 2003 approval of the
projects plans. The suit was filed in U.S. District Court in
Washington, D.C., onSept. 4twodays beforeafederal dead-
line for legal action.
Suit wants
bridge plans
re-evaluated
Proponent says that could delay
Ohio River project for years
By Marcus Green
magreen@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
See BRIDGES, A3, col. 1
State officials took steps Thursday to address the rapid
growth of independent colleges in Kentucky by approving
regulations that require themto pay licensing fees and under-
go more rigorous program reviews.
TheKentuckyCouncil onPostsecondaryEducationunani-
mously approved the regulations for both nonprofit and for-
profit private colleges operating or seeking to operate in the
state.
Thelicensingchanges will bediscussedat anOct. 27public
hearing and would take effect next year, council officials said.
They update an 18-year-old regulation that officials concede
was inadequate for protecting consumers and regulating on-
line courses.
Thefees will allowthecouncil tohirestaff toconduct more
comprehensiveoversight of newapplicants, as well as existing
State approves
new fees for
private colleges
Stricter review to update 1991 rules
By Nancy C. Rodriguez
nrodriguez@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
See COLLEGES, A5, col. 1
Max Gilpin would have sur-
vived if Pleasure Ridge Park High
Schools coaching staff had treated
his heat stroke correctly after he
collapsed at a football practice last
year, an expert on heat-related ill-
nesses testifiedThursdayinJeffer-
son Circuit Court.
Doug Casa, the director of ath-
letic-training educationat the Uni-
versity of Connecticut, told jurors
that though the 15-year-olds body
temperature reached109.4 degrees
shortly after he collapsed, his life
would have been guaranteed
saved if staff would have taken
Max into the locker room and put
him in an iced whirlpool within
five minutes of when he went
down.
If treated immediately and ag-
gressivelyits100percent surviv-
able, Casa told the jury. No kid
should ever die from heat stroke.
Casa, who has served on the
medical staffs at the Boston and
New York City marathons and is
the author of numerous studies on
heat illness, is the prosecutions
primary expert witness in the trial
of former PRP head coach Jason
Stinson, who is facing charges of
THE STINSON TRIAL
Heat expert: Teen not treated properly
Player could have
survived, he says
By Jason Riley
jriley@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
By Bill Luster, The Courier-Journal
Doug Casa, of the University of
Connecticut, said Max should have
been placed in an iced whirlpool. See STINSON, A4, col. 1
LIVE COVERAGE
Watch streaming video from the trial
and see more coverage at www.cou-
rier-journal.com
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Time: 09-10-2009 23:29 User: mstollhaus PubDate: 09-11-2009 Zone: MT Edition: 1 Page Name: A1 Color: Black Yellow Magenta Cyan
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mother acknowledged they cant definitively
knowwhen she died without a finished investi-
gation.
It is an unsolved case, but God says its not
going to be, Larry Cobb, Jessicas great uncle,
said at the vigil. He said what is done in secret
will be revealed. I pray the truth will come
forth.
Jessica was last seen at the familys Shep-
herdsville home as she was preparing to go to
school. Her body was found17 days later, about
seven miles from her home, in a dumping
ground known as the Salt River bottoms.
The sheriffs office identified Brooks, who
livednext door, as the prime suspect andarrest-
edhimJan. 18, 2001. Hewas freedmorethantwo
years later after a judge declared a mistrial
because a detective testified that Brooks had
failed a lie-detector test, which is not admissi-
ble. The charges were dismissed.
Elements of mystery
The case drew attention far beyond Bullitt
County, with such mysterious elements as ini-
tial allegations that Jessica disappeared with
two men in a black Camaro and the eventual
discovery by police that her body had been
moved from the first place it was dumped.
Ina recent interview, Brooks, whomaintains
his innocence, said there was a point when he
didnt think he would be free today.
I thought it would be a quick trial and a
guilty verdict, he said.
Edna Dishon said the family still suspects
Brooks and thinks that if he wasnt the person
responsible, he was connected to the crime in
some way.
Thoughtheir families havent spokentoeach
other in years, both the Brookses and the Dis-
hons say they believe the sheriffs office mis-
handled the case from the beginning.
They should have looked at more leads in-
stead of just me all the time, Brooks said.
They just butchered it up from the begin-
ning, said Edna Dishon, criticizing the offices
professionalismduring the initial investigation.
She said her daughter cant rest in peace.
Carroll, a retired Louisville Metro Police de-
tective who was hired by the sheriffs office in
2007, said he believes justice eventually will be
done, even if it takes another decade.
Im still very confident, Carroll said. Ten
years later, were still following up on leads.
Were still working hard on this case.
Families remain scarred
OnthedayJessicavanished, EdnaDishonre-
turned home from work about 1:30 p.m. to find
her daughters red Pontiac Sunfire in the drive-
way.
Jessicas cell phone, purse, keys and back-
pack were lying in the car, and a piece of plastic
was lying loose, broken off from the bottom of
the drivers seat.
The sheriffs office initially thought it was
dealing with a runaway and told the Dishons to
wait for her tocall. But whenJessicadidnt show
up, Edna Dishon and her husband, Mike, called
the FBI. A massive search ensued.
When Jessicas body was found more than
twoweeks later, authorities determinedshehad
been beaten and strangled.
We hadcome home fromworkthat day, and
Jessica was gone, Mike Dishon said. Weve
been through a lot since then. Me and Edna, we
really miss her.
Edna Dishon said Jessica, who would be 27
now, would probably be doing something ex-
citing had she not been slain.
Shesaidshes not sureif Jessica, whoworked
after school at Hardees and was a member of
Bullitt Central High Schools Reserve Officers
Training Corps, would be married or have kids.
Jessica was always goodwithkids, a mother
hen to her two younger brothers, Michael and
Chris, who are now 23 and 22, Dishon said.
Michael was the closest to Jessica. He
would just stay to himself after her death, she
said.
The Dishons still live on Deatsville Road,
next door to where some members of Brooks
family still live.
Edna Dishon, 44, said her family has thought
about movingbut doesnt seethepoint. Jessicas
death and its aftermath are still going to be
with us.
Charges against Brooks
David Brooks was charged with kidnapping
and murder, and his brother Joseph Tommy
Brooks was charged with complicity and tam-
pering with evidence. Those charges also were
dismissed.
In 2004, another brother, Herbert Brooks,
pleaded guilty to charges that he fired a hand-
gun 12 to 15 times in 2000 toward the Dishon
home, where about 40 relatives were gathered.
David Brooks, his wife, Irene, and their chil-
dren they nowhave four have moved sev-
eral times since his release fromjail inFebruary
2003. They nowlive in Bardstown; he said he is
currently unemployed and seeking disability
benefits for breathing problems and arthritis.
Twoyears after the trial, Brooks was againin
the limelight, when he was lauded for pulling
two neighbor children froma mobile home fire
in Okolona, where his family lived at the time.
The children later died.
I think about that all the time, said Brooks,
50, who said he is considering starting a minis-
try. I just get up in the middle of the night and
check on our kids.
Being away from his children was the har-
dest part about being in jail, he said. While he
was incarcerated, the Brookses told their chil-
dren he worked in the jail.
They would bring the kids to see me, he
said. I just got to missing them after they left.
There are other worries, too. The kidnap-
ping and murder charges were dismissed with-
out prejudice, meaning Brooks could be
charged again if prosecutors decide they have a
stronger case.
If whoever did it doesnt get caught, I think
it would just keep going on and on, said Irene
Brooks, 36, who is pregnant.
The investigation
Throughout the investigation of Jessicas
death and the subsequent trial of Brooks, the
sheriffs office was criticized for several things,
including the loss of evidence, reports, notes
and photos and the contamination of evidence.
Then, Detective Charles Mann, a13-year vet-
eran of the sheriffs office who has since died,
told the jury in Brooks case that the defendant
had failed a lie detector test, which prompted
the mistrial.
The FBI alsowas criticizedfor not recording
its interviews with Brooks and not taking notes
verbatim.
Paul Parsley, who was sheriff during the in-
vestigationandis nowretired, saidif hehadit to
do again, he would ask the Kentucky State Po-
lice for help because of the cases difficulty.
I had seen this little girl growing up, said
Parsley, 67, who also knew Brooks before the
murder. It hurts your heart.
Parsley, who lives in Shepherdsville, said the
caseremains theworst heworkedduringhis ca-
reer with the sheriffs office, which started in
1978.
Thats the first one we couldnt solve, he
said, adding that he and his deputies often
worked late into the night on the case. I would
love to see it solved. Let the family have clo-
sure.
J. Mac McAuliffe, former Bullitt Sheriffs
chief deputy, and Mike Mann, Bullitt common-
wealths attorney, wish the same.
Its something all of Bullitt County thinks
of, said McAuliffe, who urged the murderer to
come forward in a public plea that appeared in
The Courier-Journal in 2005.
Hesaidhethinks thecase-breakingtipmight
come from a death-bed confession.
Whoever killed her is still lurking, he said.
Mannsaidhe still thinks of the murder when
working on other cases.
We used everything we had, he said of the
Brooks trial. Its not that I would hope to try it
again. I would hope it will be resolved.
Bullitt County has changed a lot in the dec-
ade since Jessicas death. The countys popula-
tion has grown by more than 23 percent, to
75,028 in 2008 from60,955 in1999, and the Har-
dees Jessica worked in is gone, replaced for a
whilebyaBootlegBar-B-Qbeforeit alsoclosed.
Salt River bottoms, where her body was
found, has been filled in, making it more diffi-
cult to investigate, said Carroll, who is also a
deputycoroner withthe JeffersonCountycoro-
ners office.
Carroll saidhebelieves thekeytofindingthe
murderer could be in finding out who moved
her body at the dump site. Evidence suggests
her body was moved about 15 feet within 24
hours of the time it was found and police be-
lieve it was done so her body would be found.
Carroll wonders, Why would someone go
back and pick Jessica up and move her so that
somebody would find her?
Slow flow of tips a decade later
Before receiving the new tip, he said he
hadnt worked actively on the case since April
the leads have temporarily run out. He has
exhausted clues from forensic evidence, some
of whichwas compromisedbyprevious investi-
gators.
Several people claimed that they had seen
Jessica after her disappearance withJasonDun-
ford and James Coulter in Dunfords black Ca-
maro. Dunford died in a car accident in 2006,
and neither man was charged.
Attempts to reach Coulter were unsuccess-
ful, but he and Dunford both denied any in-
volvement in Jessicas death in 2002.
Carroll would not say whether authorities
had any suspects in the case.
When Jessica was murdered, Carroll and
Bullitts current sheriff, Donnie Tinnell, worked
for Louisville Metro Police. Tinnell, who was
elected in 2006, said there were problems with
the cases initial handling.
It was hard to undo the mistakes, Tinnell
said. Once you lose custody of evidence, it will
never be admissible in a court of law.
Working the cold case
But he said Carroll is the offices best chance
of solving the murder. Hes as good as it gets,
Tinnell said.
Carroll worked on cold cases for the Louis-
ville police, including the disappearance of
12-year-old Ann Gotlib, who went missing on
the first day of her summer break in 1983.
In December 25 years after that crime
police announced that they believe she was ab-
ducted and killed by Gregory Oakley, a child
abuser who died in 2002.
EdnaDishonhopes it wont takethat longfor
her to know what happened to Jessica.
My mom went to the grave not knowing.
My dad went to the grave not knowing, she
said. Are my husband and I going to die not
knowing what happened too?
Reporter Emily Hagedorn can be reached at (502)
582-7086.
JESSICA | Dishon family seeks closure 10 years after murder
Continued from A1
By David Harpe, Special to The Courier-Journal
Former suspect David Bucky Brooks, right, with wife Irene, moved to Bardstown, Ky.
Call for more information:
Kentucky: (502) 583-2000
Indiana: (800) 955-6886 (toll-
free)
Illinois: (217) 524-5155
Ohio: (800) 589-6446 (toll-
free)
Tennessee: (877) 786-7529
(toll-free)
All numbers for Thursday, Sept. 10,
except where noted.
Powerball
Worth: $68.9 million
For Sept. 9
Power Play 4
No six-number winner.
No five-number + Power Play
winner.
2 five-number winners:
$200,000 each.
Kentucky
Cash Ball
1 4 22 28 2
(Last number
is CASH BALL)
Kicker
9 2 3 2 1
Pick Three
Midday 1 9 6
Night 2 0 2
Pick Four
Midday 2 1 5
4
Night 7 0 0 3
For Sept. 9
Win for Life
3 14 20 26 34
41 6
No six-num-
ber winner.
No five-num-
ber + Free
Ball winner.
3 five-number
winners: $600
each.
Indiana
Daily Three
Midday 6 4 3
Night 0 0 9
Daily Four
Midday 9 5 4
9
Night 4 8 7 0
Lucky 5
Midday 9 10
11 27 36
Night 16 17
20 29 33
For Sept. 9
Hoosier Lotto
12 28 29 32 42
45
Worth: $3
million
No six-num-
ber winner.
6 five-number
winners:
$1,620.
Illinois
Pick Three
Midday 4 1 5
Night 7 2 3
Pick Four
Midday 6 1 8
6
Night 7 5 8 3
Little Lotto
16 17 18 36 38
Ohio
Pick Three
Midday 9 4 7
Night 7 3 0
Pick Four
Midday 2 8 2
9
Night 4 0 8 5
Cash Five
3 9 26 27 33
Tennessee
Cash Three
Midday 2 9 7
Evening 0 5
9
Cash Four
Midday 9 9 3
2
Evening 6 0
6 3
For Sept. 9
Pick Five
4 6 13 26 39
LOTTERIES
4 16 18 51 53 23
Thieneman political party
Because of a reporters error, a story
Tuesday on developer Chris Thiene-
mans candidacy for mayor of Louis-
ville said incorrectly that he had
switched political parties in 2008.
Thieneman, a Republican, said during
a radio program that he would switch
parties but never did.
We publish corrections in a timely
fashion. If you feel an error has been
made, please call (502) 582-4600; fax
(502) 582-4610; or e-mail reader-
line@courier-journal.com.
CORRECTION
ON THE WEB
Past results,
more information
available at the
following Web sites.
www.kylottery.com
www.hoosierlottery.com
www.illinoislottery.com
www.ohiolottery.com
www.tnlottery.gov
Time: 09-10-2009 23:42 User: mstollhaus PubDate: 09-11-2009 Zone: MT Edition: 1 Page Name: A 2 Color: Black Yellow Magenta Cyan

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