All through the summer season of 2003, America was centered on an evolving true-crime thriller down in Waco, Texas.
“Good Morning America.” CNN. Newspapers. ESPN. The story was in all places.
All eyes have been on what started because the lacking particular person case of Baylor basketball participant Patrick Dennehy. It later become a homicide who-done-it after his physique was discovered with two gunshot wounds to the pinnacle whereas decaying in a gravel pit outdoors of Waco. His automotive was present in Virginia Seaside, Virginia, with the plates eliminated.
Quickly, teammate Carlton Dotson confessed to the crime. The story grew to become much more disgraceful when secret tapes emerged of Baylor coach Dave Bliss making an attempt to border Dennehy, the deceased, as a drug seller amid an NCAA investigation into funds to gamers.
The scandal has pale so removed from public consciousness, although, that few knew and it’s believed no media reported that Dotson had been accepted for parole on March 25, 2024 — after serving a bit greater than half of his 35-year sentence.
That continued till a KWTX-TV story in Waco earlier this month detailed that Dotson was out — some 15 months after approval and 7 months after Dotson’s completion of a remedy program on Nov. 19 gained him full launch.
It was surprising to lots of the unique contributors within the story, together with Abar Rouse, the one-time Baylor assistant coach, who recorded Bliss’ feedback and, in a tragic testomony to the warped values of faculty basketball, misplaced his teaching profession as a result of he did the proper factor by talking out.
“I used to be surprised to listen to in regards to the parole,” Rouse advised ESPN this week. “I had no thought.”
Along with finishing the remedy program and normal parole necessities, Dotson, now 43, is in what Texas calls its “Tremendous-Intensive Supervision Program,” which seeks to “reduce the menace to the group from harmful offenders launched on parole or necessary supervision,” a spokesperson for the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles advised ESPN.
Again in 2003, about seven weeks after Dennehy went lacking, legislation enforcement arrested and charged Dotson with capturing his good friend and teammate. Authorities mentioned Dotson claimed demons have been after him as a result of he was “Jesus, the son of God.”
On the time of Dotson’s trial in 2005, when he pleaded responsible, the Dennehy household objected to his 35-year sentence, saying it was too quick. They finally determined to not struggle Dotson’s doable launch, discovering admirable grace within the face of many years of loss and mourning.
“Over time, Patrick’s sister, Wynn, and I’ve opposed Carlton’s parole,” Dennehy’s stepfather, Brian Brabazon, advised ESPN this week. “In 2023, we softened our stance, as we predict Patrick could have, and advised [the Texas Department of Criminal Justice] we nonetheless felt he ought to do all this time, however we’d let the parole board make their very own choice.”
Brabazon knew of Dotson’s launch as a result of the TDCJ knowledgeable the household on the time and updates them each time Dotson modifications his tackle. Brabazon mentioned Dotson resides in Houston, though he has bounced round Texas, together with a stint in Waco, since getting out. Makes an attempt to succeed in Dotson have been unsuccessful.
If doable, Brabazon mentioned, he want to communicate to Dotson, if just for a measure of closure.
“I have never reached out to him, however after we have been on the lookout for Patrick [in 2003], I spoke to Dotson on the cellphone and I requested what occurred,” Brabazon mentioned. “He advised me if we might meet in particular person, he would inform me. I am nonetheless ready for his rationalization.”
MEANWHILE, THERE IS Rouse, who’s life and profession path was abruptly upended by the tragedy. A former Baylor pupil supervisor, he spent years climbing the teaching ladder at junior faculties in Iowa and North Carolina earlier than, at age 27, touchdown what he thought was his massive break — a spot on Bliss’ workers at Division I Baylor.
“Each younger coach desires to be a head coach, lead their workforce to a championship and see their youngsters graduate,” Rouse mentioned. ” I had that very same aspiration.”
His first day was June 1. By June 12, Dennehy was lacking. Because the hunt for Dennehy and finally his killer overtook all the things, Bliss was centered on heading off an NCAA investigation into cash being paid to gamers, together with Dotson and Dennehy.
The plan was to inform authorities that Dennehy was a drug seller and thus flush with money. Rouse, maybe alone at Baylor, acted with honor, when he went to an area Wal-Mart, purchased a easy tape recorder and “wired myself” for subsequent conversations involving Bliss.
New on the job, he mentioned he had little thought of how this system ran and thought nobody would imagine his phrase in opposition to a veteran coach if he did not have proof.
“We’re speaking about perjury, asking individuals to smear or defame an harmless younger man who had been killed,” Rouse mentioned. “You are breaking legal guidelines, you are altering a homicide investigation.”
He finally turned within the tapes of Bliss discussing the plan and training gamers on what to say to the NCAA. Bliss and Baylor’s athletic director shortly resigned, and Baylor went with a recent begin, hiring Scott Drew and a brand new workers with no ties to the varsity. Drew has led this system to prominence, together with the 2021 nationwide title.
Rouse mentioned he understood Baylor’s choice however did not anticipate being blackballed throughout the business as he seemed for assistant teaching jobs elsewhere.
To many head coaches, the truth that he recorded his boss mattered greater than the potential crimes he was making an attempt to doc.
He briefly labored as a grad assistant at Division II Midwestern State below mentor Jeff Ray, however the low-paying job might solely final so lengthy. A once-promising younger coach discovered nobody else prepared to even interview him. He admits to battling anger and sleepless nights.
“My query to these coaches was: What if that was their baby?” Rouse mentioned. “Would they nonetheless really feel like that was OK? … After I walked into a child’s home and recruited him, one of many issues I did to reassure dad and mom was inform them I used to be going to look at over them like they have been my very own. Properly, a few of us imply it and a few of us do not.”
If nothing else, Rouse uncovered the entire lack of ethics coaches similar to Bliss, now 81, and retired, possessed. Bliss initially apologized however then, within the 2017 Showtime documentary “Disgraced,” repeated lots of the identical lies about Dennehy.
“The state of affairs with Carlton and Patrick needed to come about to see that, for some individuals, there is not any restrict, there is not any purple line,” Rouse continued. “There’s nothing that they will not do with the intention to safe victories, to get the subsequent recruit.”
He now counts getting away from faculty basketball as a blessing of kinds as a result of he turned to a profession in, of all issues, corrections, becoming a member of the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Now 49, the married father of 4 and grandfather of seven lives in Victorville, California, the place he works as an assistant warden at one of many three sprawling federal amenities there.
“Typically I do surprise: Had I continued in teaching would I actually be completely satisfied?” Rouse mentioned. “I am completely satisfied now. I am completely satisfied doing what I do, working with the people who I work with, working with individuals of integrity, working for an company of integrity.
“I am pleased with it,” he continued. “I serve with satisfaction. I do not know if that will essentially be true if I used to be in faculty basketball.”
He is beforehand walked jail tiers, run leisure applications and taught inmate courses from Louisiana to Mississippi. On the ADX Supermax in Florence, Colorado — the “Alcatraz of the Rockies” — he supervised instructional choices for the nation’s most harmful offenders.
Day-after-day is a brand new problem. There are not any roaring March Insanity crowds, however there’s a far higher goal than successful video games.
“You recognize, I am a coach,” Rouse mentioned. “I’ve all the time been a motivator. I will be the man on the market doing additional and as a way to get different individuals to do additional. You are mainly teaching a workforce on this company. You are working together with your workers; you are working with the [inmates].”
The integrity that price him his teaching profession is nonnegotiable in his present function. Something much less endangers everybody and all the things.
“Not having it could possibly kill individuals,” Rouse mentioned. “Individuals can die. That is not simply particularly the Bureau of Prisons; that is any jail. We all the time inform new troops: We run into hazard; we do not run from it.
“Integrity is one among our core values. That’s what drew me into the company and has sustained me by means of any robust time that I’ve had. ‘Truthful, agency and constant.’ It simply so occurs to line up with my background and what I believed as a human being.”
He was house along with his spouse two weekends in the past when he heard of Dotson’s parole. He discovered himself taken by emotion in any respect that occurred in 2003 and since.
“It simply all got here again,” Rouse mentioned. “I believed, clearly, of Patrick and Patrick’s household. I thought of Pat’s mother, his sister, his stepdad and the way harm they’ll be.
“I additionally imagine in rehabilitation although. You’ll be able to’t work in jail in case you do not imagine in rehabilitation. … Is [Dotson] rehabilitated? Is he able to operate? Did he get what he wanted inside to have the ability to operate?
“One child is gone and, and that is a tragedy. And the child that did it’s now out. And the way do you are feeling about that?”
The reply is not easy. Not for Rouse, not for Dennehy’s household, not for anybody.
For many of America, a as soon as all-consuming story has pale from reminiscence. For these in it, nonetheless, the affect by no means ends.