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nacktman
03-21-2008, 01:28 PM
Pregnant Mother, Tortured, Dies in Illinois.

<!-- google_ad_section_start (name=blsadstrgt)--> Banished to the basement, the 29-year-old mother with a childlike mind and another baby on the way had little more than a thin rug and a mattress to call her own on the chilly concrete floor.
Dorothy Dixon ate what she could forage from the refrigerator upstairs, where housemates used her for target practice with BBs, burned her with a glue gun and doused her with scalding liquid that peeled away her skin.
They torched what few clothes she had, so she walked around naked. They often pummeled her with an aluminum bat or metal handle.
Dixon - six months pregnant - died after weeks of abuse. Police have charged two adults, three teenagers and a 12-year-old boy with murder in the case that has repulsed many in this Mississippi River town.
"This is heartbreaking," police Lt. David Hayes said. "It was almost as though they were making fun of the abuse they were administering. This woman was almost like living in a prison."
Investigators put much of the blame on Michelle Riley, 35, who they said befriended Dixon but pocketed monthly Social Security checks she got because of her developmental delays.
Dixon saw little, if any, of the money, Hayes said. For months she weathered the torment to keep a roof over her head and that of her year-old son, who weighed just 15 pounds when taken into state custody after his mom's death.
"I've never seen an almost conspiratorial effort by a group of people to continuously torture someone until she finally died, then not really show any remorse," Hayes said. "It was just a slow, torturous, tragic way to die. I highly doubt Dorothy Dixon even knew she was dying."
Riley, 43-year-old Judy Woods and three teenagers, including Riley's 15-year-old daughter, LeShelle McBride, are charged with first-degree murder, aggravated and heinous battery, intentional homicide of an unborn child, and unlawful restraint. Riley's 12-year-old son is charged as a juvenile.
Riley, her daughter, Woods and 16-year-old Benny Wilson have public defenders who did not immediately return messages for comment. An 18-year-old defendant, Michael Elliott, planned to get his own attorney, court records show.
All remain in jail on $1 million bond.
Messages left with a Chicago-area sister of Dixon went unreturned, but neighbors, Hayes and newspaper accounts offer a mosaic of the months leading to Dixon's demise inside the small, white, blue-shuttered house.
Riley and Dixon, police said, had lived in Quincy, a Mississippi River town about 100 miles north of St. Louis, Mo. Quincy is where Riley worked as a coordinator for a regional center that helps the developmentally disabled with housing and other services. Dixon was a client.
For years, an impoverished Riley struggled raising her children. Her use of methamphetamine and cocaine brought drug convictions in 2002 and 2004. But with treatment and housing help from the Quincy YWCA, Riley put her life in order - so much that in February of last year, the Quincy Herald-Whig did a story on her comeback.
Last summer, Dixon and Riley moved into the $800-a-month, three-bedroom rental in Alton about 15 miles north of St. Louis. From the start, neighbors Chad Hudson and Terri Brandt considered Riley trouble.
"Michelle was evil, vindictive. Manipulative," said Hudson, convinced the teenagers were Riley's powerless minions.
"She was angry, vicious," added Brandt.
Riley considered Dixon her slave, making her rub Riley's feet until Riley fell asleep and forcing her to run naked around the house when she got in trouble, the neighbors said.
"Being in their house was like being in a prison day room," Hudson said. "They just sat around the kitchen table and fought."
There was little question that Riley ruled the roost.
While doing fix-ups on the home last fall, landlord Steve Atkins saw Riley "barking orders" at the children and everyone else. Atkins joked to her whether he needed to call the Army and see if they wanted their drill sergeant back.
"She didn't laugh about it at all," Atkins said. "Obviously, I hit a nerve."
Atkins said Dixon generally kept to herself "but was always nice when she spoke to you." He saw no hints she'd been suffering or tortured.
"I would have never, ever suspected something like this," he said. "It's definitely shocking."
Police said Dixon was allowed out of the house but didn't say under what conditions. Hayes didn't know who the father of Dixon's fetus is.
Hayes said things apparently came to a head Jan. 30, when investigators believe that Woods, during a dispute, beat Dixon on the head with an object Hayes wouldn't identify. The next day Woods found her dead.
Hayes watched the autopsy and found her injuries disturbing. X-rays revealed roughly 30 BBs lodged in her. Deep-tissue burns covered about one-third of her body - her face, her chest, her arms and feet - and left her severely dehydrated. Her face and body showed signs of prolonged abuse. Many of her wounds were infected.
None of the injuries, Hayes said, proved singly fatal to Dixon. Her system already was taxed by her unborn baby.
"The autopsy sort of indicates her immune system just shut down," he said. "It was not capable of fending off any more."
In the rental home's basement, Atkins said, he found spots of blood in a shower and tiny smears on the concrete floor, washer and dryer.
"It's disgraceful the way this girl died, as kind and as sweet as this girl was," he said. "She didn't deserve to die the way she did. It's just terrible, senseless. It's just a total shame."

(From the Associated Press)

*****



I was going to post this on the Decline and Fall of the United States thread, but no, the wing-nuts would only poo-poo and dismiss it.
Though it is a glaring example of just that ... the decline and fall!


This is an outrage and is not to be tolerated in a true civilized society.
I want to know where the line is to volunteer to shovel the holes to bury these moral-less wastes of carbon is?!

luvnaturism
03-21-2008, 01:36 PM
I don't think you measure moral decay in a society on the basis of a single incident. Evil people have been part of the human scene forever, but you don't judge a society by an incredibly small minority.

What I do believe is that decent people easily forget how evil evil is. This reminds us.

nacktman
03-21-2008, 08:06 PM
I don't think you measure moral decay in a society on the basis of a single incident. Evil people have been part of the human scene forever, but you don't judge a society by an incredibly small minority.

What I do believe is that decent people easily forget how evil evil is. This reminds us.

No one is 'judging' on this example alone luv.
This is but one example.

You are very correct when you say - "... that decent people easily forget how evil evil is. This reminds us".
We need reminding.
Which in and of itself is disheartening.

jon71
03-21-2008, 09:12 PM
Heinous is right. It's sad that such cruelty exists, very sad. I will never understand how people can be like that. I don't wish to hijack this and make it overly relgious but "love thy neighbor" comes to mind. Why couldn't a little of that been present, even just a little?

enertronik
03-22-2008, 01:14 AM
i feel sick

LamontCranston
03-22-2008, 11:44 AM
This is but one example. Nacktman... remember the home invasion in CT last summer? The story was discussed on this board a bit. Two parolees were caught at gunpoint coming out of the driveway of a burning house with three bodies inside.

They had both been released from prison with years remaining on their sentences. The parol board didn't even read the sentencing judge's recommendations.

No one lost a job, and still no trial. :mad:

Instead, taxpayers are financing a public defenders office because some prosecutor wants to become famous trying a death penalty case... in a state where there's only been two executions in 40 years.

Meanwhile, the evil men are given protective custody in a climate controlled cell, three squares a day and all the Jerry Springer they care to watch. It's disgusting.

Meanwhile, the governor is concerned with billboards and plastic water bottles. The society we live in is indeed in decline.

DenitaLC
03-22-2008, 08:11 PM
I work with young (18-21) disabled adults in our school district. The poor woman in this story makes me think of my "kids" and pray that society/people will treat them with the respect they deserve.

I hope these monsters that abused and murdered Ms. Dixon are prosecuted to the fullest degree possible and rot in jail. Sickening, just sickening

Qikdraw
03-24-2008, 01:02 PM
Same story, but basically saying that this happned because of cuts to the system (http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/13620).

Different story, but almost as heinious. How an Unwanted Guardianship Cost a Firefighter His Freedom and His Fortune (http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/13634)

Qikdraw

Boreas
03-24-2008, 01:53 PM
The gutting of government-provided social services and the nearly wild-west atmosphere in the privatization of these sorts of services sets a stage for this crap to recur anywhere.

Amen. We are seeing that up here too. And the neo-liberalists would have us believe she could just pull herself up by her own bootstraps, or that family will lovingly look after her. Balderdash.

If she qualified for the check she most likely did not possess the ability to handle the check - it's almost mutually exclusive. Somebody would have had to have been established as a payee.

If that person was Ms. Riley...absolutely dastardly, man.

One often hears the cliché "falling through the cracks": the "cracks" are actually chasms. Chasms excavated by the gutting of government social services.


In the scope of spending TRILLIONS on a "war" of specious origins and intents, funding proper social services properly would be a tiny drop in the bucket. Lives would be saved and enhanced. LOTS of jobs would be created.

But no... we have countries to bomb and people to kill. Can't be helping poor retarded Americans.

"She didn't deserve to die the way she did"

This could have been prevented.

It absolutely boggles my mind when right-winged think tanks seem to think this type of thing is okay. Frankly it is happening all over, and usually with less tragic results. Never-the-less, still tragic because the weaker members of our society are being treated abysmally!

Skinview
03-24-2008, 03:32 PM
The gutting of government-provided social services and the nearly wild-west atmosphere in the privatization of these sorts of services sets a stage for this crap to recur anywhereAmen. We are seeing that up here too. And the neo-liberalists would have us believe she could just pull herself up by her own bootstraps, or that family will lovingly look after her. Balderdash.Whoaaaa! This is not a "privatized" service, this is your government inaction (the contraction is not a typo).

It absolutely boggles my mind when right-winged think tanks seem to think this type of thing is okay.Murder????? What??? Give me a quote.

Frankly it is happening all over, and usually with less tragic results. Never-the-less, still tragic because the weaker members of our society are being treated abysmally!Oh yeah, government does an abysmal job, and so the private sector must be blamed. I do not think that DSS is something that should be privatized, but this is really not a sensible topic to use to bash privatization.

Boreas
03-24-2008, 04:24 PM
The issue Skinview is not government vs private. The issue is that the right-wing, neo-liberal leadership we all now enjoy sees the benefit of cutting services to stupid levels. The government once did provide these services quite well. The some wise person decided that we could not afford social services. They seem to follow Friedman and his cronies who believe in minimal government, and minimal social services. That is the issue. Then folks with similar views to yours come along and say "see what a horrible job the government is doing? We must privatise". It is a shell game.

As for the murder comment, that is not what I was saying that right-winged folks think is okay. What boggles my mind, to be clear, is that right-winged folks seem to think that cutting services to absolute stupid, unworkable levels is okay.....and that these unworkable levels lead to dire consequences. Do they not see that people die as a result? Do they not see that the private sector does not always pick up the slack? Etc.

For the past 20-30 years, governments have been cutting back services to mentally ill, and developmentally challenged. The mantra has been close institutions and put "these people" in community services. Of course, the funding never went to community services. So the mantra changed to, let the private sector do it. Yeah right. Still waiting. We had a rash of abuse allegations from nursing home residents and their families recently. These were privately run nursing homes. I tried to find a link or three and couldn't just now. If I find one, I will add it.

So, to be clear. I am not bashing privatization. I am angry at the current political view that says that social services are too expensive, and military expenses are the most important. I believe, call me silly, that we could budget things in such a way that we could provide an adequate social safety net, AND look after business interests.

I am interested that you believe that the government should provide social services. Do you speak up about it within your world? Do you vote for those who might support this?

I will admit that I am not an impartial observer in this. I have worked in social services for 20+ years and have seen a steady decline in funding, and in quality of service due to insufficient staffing levels. This decline has been due mostly because of political ideology.