David Owen Brooks Denied Parole


ANGLETON, Texas — Relatives who were told a Houston serial killer may be days away from release expressed relief as his parole was turned down just hours after they addressed Texas Parole Board members, Local 2 Investigates reported Friday.

“I think we got some action, some positive action, from the meeting,” said James Dreymala, whose 13-year-old son, Stanton, was the last victim to die in the 1973 killing spree.

He and other relatives addressed a Texas Board of Pardons and Parole panel member in Angleton Friday, near the prison where David Owen Brooks is serving a life sentence in the killings of at least 29 boys from the Houston Heights.

“I think he’s a human being, and I left it with the fact that any person with any feelings whatsoever would vote no on his parole,” said Dreymala.

His family said that a parole board member told them that parole was likely days away for Brooks, but that attitude changed after Local 2 Investigates reported on the case Thursday night.

Parole Board member Cornith Davis, who was appointed by the governor, shook the families’ hands and told them he had just met with Brooks behind bars Friday as he prepared to make a decision.

Brooks is serving a life term, along with Elmer Wayne Henley, for rounding up boys for serial killer Dean Corrl to torture and kill at a Pasadena home. The crime spree was discovered in 1973 when Henley shot and killed Corrl at that home.

Dreymala’s sister, who was 9 years old when her brother was murdered, said after the meeting that, “I feel like things have changed.”

“I just feel like he’s aware that there’s a lot of power behind us, and that there’s a lot of people that feel the same as we do that, not just victims’ families, but members of society, that don’t want to see him out of prison,” she said.

Facebook page set up by the family to drum up support proudly announced the parole board’s ruling Friday.

Two of the three members of the parole board panel assigned to the case in Angleton cast votes against the parole Friday after the family’s meeting, which formally turned down Brooks’ parole.

 Davis also told the family that he spoke to a relative of Brooks’, who contacted him after the Local 2 Investigates report, and she also urged that parole be denied.

 Brooks will be eligible for parole again in three years. This now makes at least 18 times that his parole has been denied since his 1975 conviction.

James Dreymala said, “I want to see him stay there until he dies, personally.”

 The parole board did turn down the family’s request to have the time between each parole review extended. Instead of being up for parole every three years, they asked the board to extend that to five years between each review.

The board turned down that request.

 Outside the parole board panel meeting in Angleton, city of Houston crime victim’s advocate Andy Kahan said, “There’s no reason for this family and other families to be put through this procedure every few years when it’s within the board’s discretion to give this family more time to heal and go about their lives. This is what you would call a no-brainer case, not to release a serial killer and there’s no reason to every few years to be up here taking the time and resources.”

He said the parole board only extends the time to the state maximum, five years between each parole review, in a fraction of one percent of the eligible murder cases statewide.

 The relatives of Stanton Dreymala said they will meet face to face with parole board members in the same fashion any time that Brooks or Henley come up for parole in the future.

Video and Links

I just can not understand why these families have to keep going through these hearings. Even his own family does not trust him to be out on the streets.

He claims he never killed anyone, but he brought those boys to Corill to be killed. Even if you believe Brooks what he admits to is no different than if he fed the to pigs alive.

From Time Magazine

In all, I guess there were between 25 and 30 boys killed, and they were buried in three different places. I was present and helped bury many of them but not all of them . . . On the first one at Sam Rayburn [Reservoir] I helped bury him, and then the next one we took to Sam Rayburn. When we got there, Dean and Wayne found that the first one had come to the surface and either a foot or a hand was above the ground. When they buried this one the second time, they put some type of rock sheet on top of him to keep him down.

—David Owen Brooks, in his statement to Texas police.

Read more

He minimizes his role every time he speaks.

He guesses there were 25-30? He seems to have so much compassion for the victims doesn’t he?

I agree with Mr. Dreymala, keep him locked up until he dies.

 

David Brooks was born in Beaumont, Texas in 1955. Like Wayne Henley and Dean Corll, he was the product of a broken home. His parents were divorced in the early 1960s when David was only five years old. He spent part of his time in Houston with his father and the rest of the time with his mother in Beaumont.

Wayne Henley (right), David Brooks (left)

Wayne Henley (left), David Brooks (right)

Despite the divorce of his parents, David had a promising beginning as a student, making excellent grades in elementary school. Then in junior high, his grades plummeted. Around this time, he became associated with Dean Corll, who paid him for his sexual favors. Corll had such a grip on the young man that he dropped out of high school shortly after he started so that he could spend all of his free time with Corll.

A sympathetic (IMO) look at David and Wayne from the Crime Library.

Only 3 years to go until his next chance at freedom.

    • frigginloon
    • October 3rd, 2011

    Texas, releasing a serial killer???? That’s a surprise!

  1. So many serial killers I’ve never heard of. Scary.

    • tenes
    • December 29th, 2011

    It’s amazing that Brooks and Henley are still alive. They participated in and helped make possible the unspeakably sadistic, extremely painful and cruel torture rape and murder of young boys. Many of these kids they brought to Corll were aquaintances and friends and even childhood friends of theirs. The psychological and physical pain these victims went through must be incomprehensible.These 2 (3) are obviously all psychopaths of the worst variety and there is no cure for that. Again though, I thought prison populations had little tolerance for child torture rape murderers?

      • Fred
      • May 19th, 2013

      I was a correctional officer at the Barry Telford Unit in New Boston when Henley was there. He was kept under protective custody in which he was housed with other rapists and pedophiles. The inmates who would kill them can’t get at them. He worked in the prison laundry and never gave me any trouble. He’s a weird guy. Very small. Quiet. Still, I never turned my back on him and I’m 6-1, 230. I spent 24 years in the Army, been in combat, but this guy weirded me out.

    • mdd
    • February 4th, 2012

    TO ME THE F—ER SHOULD DIE TO BAD SOMEONE IN PRISON DONT TAKE CARE OF THE MOTHER F—ER AND TORTURE AND KILL HIM LIKE HE DID THEIR VICTOMS

    • HH
    • June 30th, 2012

    Why were not these 2 de-humans tried for capital punishment, executed, buried and done with instead of Texans continuing to feed, clothe and shelter them? Henley and Brooks lured (intent with knowledge/malice aforethought), watched and/or paraticipated in the tortured deaths (party to the crime) and assisted in the burial (where would the question of safety/rehabilitation come to play?). Capital punishment should have been a “yes” and would they remain a social threat should have been a “Yes” Yes and Yes = death. Only death remains the anwer.

      • Fred
      • May 19th, 2013

      When he wss convicted the death penalty had been outlawed. The max penalty at that time was life

    • Gary
    • May 31st, 2013

    I went to junior high with him. He was mean and arrogant then. He may have been unlucky to meet coryl, but unfortunately that experience made him unable to be rehabilitated. Warped permanently.

    • Kathryn Vauthrin
    • July 2nd, 2013

    I was a teacher at a prison in Texas where David Brooks was housed. I personally had some contact with him. We seem to forget that these boys were probably “brainwashed” by Dean Corl…I am not certain either of them killed anyone. We recently had three women who were “held” for years by a psycho…these girls were also “brainwashed”. Who knows what Corl did to these boys? Do they deserve to ever be free? I don’t know. Perhaps we should look at the entire case and decide.

    • karen
    • October 9th, 2013

    These guys knew what they were doing and were happy to do it they should have there nuts cut off and fed to them and thrown into a pit of wild boars then thrown into a big hole in the ground and throw gas on them and watch them burn in hell no one should have died the way these people did

    • nancy
    • November 11th, 2014

    i dated both boys in my teens an they both were good guys till dean came into there life david was a very sweet nice guy who help me with my mother who was very sick , Wayne use to ask my mom to drive him home at night for he was scared to walk home alone , that madman tortured an killed a lot of boys an also destroyed wayne and davids lifes

    • Do you still stay in touch with either of them?

      • William
      • January 4th, 2017

      Interesting that you would admit to dating any one of these guys let alone two. You must have been into dating younger guys. The reason I say that is that if you do even a modest amount of checking sources agree corll befriended david at the age of 12. So this would have been the age when he supposedly changed from the “nice” guy he was.

  1. December 4th, 2011

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