He may be in jail, but he'll still have better hair than you.
A kidnapper is suing his victims, claiming they reneged on a verbal contract in which they agreed to hide him in exchange for cash. And then the story gets weird.
Jesse Dimmick, a fugitive wanted on a murder charge, broke into the Topeka, Kansas, home of newlyweds Jared and Lindsay Rowley in September 2009.
The couple fed him Cheetos and Dr Pepper and watched the film Patch Adams with him to gain his trust, then fled the house after he fell asleep, reports the Topeka Capital-Journal.
In the tussle that followed, Dimmick was accidentally shot by Officer Guy Gardner’s rifle. Dimmick launched a lawsuit against the city and the cop, according to the report. He is seeking $75,000 in damages — the same amount the Rowleys are suing him for.
He also filed a counterclaim against the Rowleys. Dimmick said the couple is legally bound to honour an oral agreement they made to hide him.
All three lawsuits are still pending.
Jesse Dimmick, a fugitive wanted on a murder charge, broke into the Topeka, Kansas, home of newlyweds Jared and Lindsay Rowley in September 2009.
The couple fed him Cheetos and Dr Pepper and watched the film Patch Adams with him to gain his trust, then fled the house after he fell asleep, reports the Topeka Capital-Journal.
In the tussle that followed, Dimmick was accidentally shot by Officer Guy Gardner’s rifle. Dimmick launched a lawsuit against the city and the cop, according to the report. He is seeking $75,000 in damages — the same amount the Rowleys are suing him for.
He also filed a counterclaim against the Rowleys. Dimmick said the couple is legally bound to honour an oral agreement they made to hide him.
All three lawsuits are still pending.
A more detailed report by THE TOPEKA CAPITAL-JOURNAL. SOURCE
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Jesse Dimmick is suing the couple he was convicted of kidnapping while on the run from police.
Dimmick contends in the breach of contract suit seeking $235,000 that after he entered Jared and Lindsay Rowley’s house in 2009, they reached a legally binding, oral contract that they would hide him for an unspecified amount of money.
“Later, the Rowleys reneged on said oral contract, resulting in my being shot in the back by authorities,” Dimmick wrote in a notarized legal document indicating he was filing the counterclaim in response to a suit against Dimmick that the Rowleys filed in September.
Dimmick personally — in longhand — wrote the document, which was filed Oct. 21 in Shawnee County District Court.
He wrote: “As a result of the plaintiffs breech (sic) of contract, I, the defendant suffered a gunshot to my back, which almost killed me. The hospital bills alone are in excess of $160,000, which I have no way to pay.”
The Rowleys sought this month to have the suit dismissed, saying they never accepted Dimmick’s offer of money and — if they had — their consent would have been given under duress. District Judge Franklin Theis has yet to rule on their motion for dismissal.
Dimmick, a fugitive facing a murder charge in Colorado, was leading authorities on a vehicle chase on the morning of Sept. 12, 2009, when law enforcement stop sticks punctured the tires of the stolen van he was driving. The van came to a halt in the front yard in southwest Shawnee County’s Dover community of the home of the Rowleys, who were newlyweds.
The Rowleys said Dimmick entered their home and confronted them at knifepoint. A neighbor told The Topeka Capital-Journal in September 2009 that the couple gained his trust by eating Cheetos and drinking Dr Pepper with him while watching the movie “Patch Adams.”
The couple fled the house after Dimmick fell asleep. Police said they entered and ordered Dimmick onto his stomach before a Topeka police officer’s rifle accidentally discharged, striking Dimmick in the back.
Dimmick was convicted in May 2010 in Shawnee County District Court of four felonies, including two counts of kidnapping. He was sentenced to 10 years and 11 months in prison. Dimmick is currently being held in the Adams County Detention Center in Brighton, Colo., on a murder charge linked to the September 2009 killing there of Michael Curtis.
Dimmick filed a civil suit against the city of Topeka in September 2010 seeking damages in excess of $75,000, including medical expenses. A pretrial hearing in the suit is set for Dec. 6.
Attorney Robert E. Keeshan filed a lawsuit last September on behalf of the Rowleys against Dimmick seeking damages in excess of $75,000 and contending he committed the torts of trespass, intrusion upon seclusion and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
Dimmick filed a response Oct. 21 seeking to have the Rowleys’ claim dismissed and stating a counterclaim for breach of contract seeking $160,000 to cover hospital bills and $75,000 for pain and suffering.
Dimmick’s response said he was representing himself “without the aid of proffessional (sic) legal counsel.”
He wrote that after he entered the Rowleys’ home, “I told them that I was being pursuid (sic) by a person, or persons, who appeared to be police officers, who were trying to kill me.”
He added: “I, the defendant, asked the Rowleys to hide me because I feared for my life. I offered the Rowleys an unspecified amount of money which they agreed upon, therefore forging a legally binding oral contract.”
Dimmick’s response said he never brandished a knife or any other type of weapon to try to force the Rowleys to hide him or agree to a contract.
Keeshan filed an answer to Dimmick’s counterclaim on behalf of the Rowleys Oct. 27, then filed a motion to dismiss the counterclaim Nov. 4.
Keeshan wrote in the motion that if the Rowleys had agreed to an oral contract — which they deny — it wouldn’t have been legally binding because no specific dollar amount was given.
“In order for parties to form a binding contract, there must be a meeting of the minds on all essential terms, including and most specifically, an agreement on the price,” he wrote.
Keeshan added that if the Rowleys had agreed to the contract, that agreement wouldn’t have been legally binding because their consent would have been given under duress.
He wrote, “The Rowleys believed he had a gun and knew that he had a knife.”
Keeshan also wrote there could be no legal contract because the Rowleys were asked to hide a fugitive, which is illegal.
Dimmick contends in the breach of contract suit seeking $235,000 that after he entered Jared and Lindsay Rowley’s house in 2009, they reached a legally binding, oral contract that they would hide him for an unspecified amount of money.
“Later, the Rowleys reneged on said oral contract, resulting in my being shot in the back by authorities,” Dimmick wrote in a notarized legal document indicating he was filing the counterclaim in response to a suit against Dimmick that the Rowleys filed in September.
Dimmick personally — in longhand — wrote the document, which was filed Oct. 21 in Shawnee County District Court.
He wrote: “As a result of the plaintiffs breech (sic) of contract, I, the defendant suffered a gunshot to my back, which almost killed me. The hospital bills alone are in excess of $160,000, which I have no way to pay.”
The Rowleys sought this month to have the suit dismissed, saying they never accepted Dimmick’s offer of money and — if they had — their consent would have been given under duress. District Judge Franklin Theis has yet to rule on their motion for dismissal.
Dimmick, a fugitive facing a murder charge in Colorado, was leading authorities on a vehicle chase on the morning of Sept. 12, 2009, when law enforcement stop sticks punctured the tires of the stolen van he was driving. The van came to a halt in the front yard in southwest Shawnee County’s Dover community of the home of the Rowleys, who were newlyweds.
The Rowleys said Dimmick entered their home and confronted them at knifepoint. A neighbor told The Topeka Capital-Journal in September 2009 that the couple gained his trust by eating Cheetos and drinking Dr Pepper with him while watching the movie “Patch Adams.”
The couple fled the house after Dimmick fell asleep. Police said they entered and ordered Dimmick onto his stomach before a Topeka police officer’s rifle accidentally discharged, striking Dimmick in the back.
Dimmick was convicted in May 2010 in Shawnee County District Court of four felonies, including two counts of kidnapping. He was sentenced to 10 years and 11 months in prison. Dimmick is currently being held in the Adams County Detention Center in Brighton, Colo., on a murder charge linked to the September 2009 killing there of Michael Curtis.
Dimmick filed a civil suit against the city of Topeka in September 2010 seeking damages in excess of $75,000, including medical expenses. A pretrial hearing in the suit is set for Dec. 6.
Attorney Robert E. Keeshan filed a lawsuit last September on behalf of the Rowleys against Dimmick seeking damages in excess of $75,000 and contending he committed the torts of trespass, intrusion upon seclusion and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
Dimmick filed a response Oct. 21 seeking to have the Rowleys’ claim dismissed and stating a counterclaim for breach of contract seeking $160,000 to cover hospital bills and $75,000 for pain and suffering.
Dimmick’s response said he was representing himself “without the aid of proffessional (sic) legal counsel.”
He wrote that after he entered the Rowleys’ home, “I told them that I was being pursuid (sic) by a person, or persons, who appeared to be police officers, who were trying to kill me.”
He added: “I, the defendant, asked the Rowleys to hide me because I feared for my life. I offered the Rowleys an unspecified amount of money which they agreed upon, therefore forging a legally binding oral contract.”
Dimmick’s response said he never brandished a knife or any other type of weapon to try to force the Rowleys to hide him or agree to a contract.
Keeshan filed an answer to Dimmick’s counterclaim on behalf of the Rowleys Oct. 27, then filed a motion to dismiss the counterclaim Nov. 4.
Keeshan wrote in the motion that if the Rowleys had agreed to an oral contract — which they deny — it wouldn’t have been legally binding because no specific dollar amount was given.
“In order for parties to form a binding contract, there must be a meeting of the minds on all essential terms, including and most specifically, an agreement on the price,” he wrote.
Keeshan added that if the Rowleys had agreed to the contract, that agreement wouldn’t have been legally binding because their consent would have been given under duress.
He wrote, “The Rowleys believed he had a gun and knew that he had a knife.”
Keeshan also wrote there could be no legal contract because the Rowleys were asked to hide a fugitive, which is illegal.