|
http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/03/21/torture.slaying.ap/index.html
This news story has pierced the core of my being. Dorothy Dixon was
not
only disabled but pregnant as well and a house of five people and a
child gladly tortured her for weeks until she died. They kept her in a
basement, shot BB's at her (the autopsy reported a finding of 30
embedded in her), burned her with hot glue, and forced her to run
around the house naked among other things.
What kind of human beings could commit such a nauseating crime? CNN's
story has pictures and names of them. I squinted and scanned the faces
looking for signs of disturbance (we all become physiognomists after
horrendous crimes). Michelle Riley, who has a tough but pretty face,
was the ring leader, the "general." The neighbors called the obviously
apathetic teens Riley's "minions" and said she forced Dixon to massage
her.
I can't shake the feeling of this nightmarish tale. It has twisted
my gut into knots and has caused a wave of sadness on this Easter
morning. I just imagine Dorothy, pregnant, naked, and isolated in the
basement with a mattress and a rug, living in constant fear of what
would come next. In the story, the writer says she wasn't necessary locked in
the basement. The rules for when she could or couldn't leave are
unclear. But I know that one doesn't have to be physically restrained
to be held captive. Dorothy's disability, I'm assuming it was something
mental because she was able to run, probably limited her understanding
of the situation. Most likely she either thought that they would kill
her if she left or that she simply couldn't leave because she had
nowhere to go.
Dorothy's tale reminds me of the story of Kaspar Hauser. Kaspar was
a boy who had been imprisoned from the time he was two until the age of
16 when he was abandoned in the middle of Nuremberg, Germany in 1828.
When he was found, he could only speak a few words that he didn't
understand. The townspeople took him in and educated him. Eventually
he told of being kept in a tiny cell where he saw no daylight. The
only instance of human contact he had was when his captor would beat
him because he made too much noise playing with a toy horse.
Why do people feel the need to imprison others? It seems to be due
to some self-deficiency that gives them the urge to have complete
authority over another. They feel so bad about themselves that they
need to have a guaranteed punching bag. They are the parent, the
guardian, the judge, the executioner, the master, the king, the god of
another. Michelle Riley must have been drunk on that power. Dorothy
Dixon was Riley's slave, her servant, her stress relief, her comfort,
and her pleasure.
Dorothy Dixon has now become a part of me. I will carry her story
and her pain in my memory until I die. I never pray but I will for
Dorothy. This "sweet girl," as the neighbors called her who was the
sacrifice of mean-spirited, disturbed persons. Her story should not be
forgotten.
|