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UNCW

Dixon Called Faulkner's Father First: A Dorm Murder That Exposed Admissions Background-Check Failures

NCassaulttimely warningmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On May 5, 2004, freshman Jessica Faulkner, 18, was lured to fellow dormitory resident Curtis Dixon's room in Cornerstone Hall at UNC Wilmington, where he beat, strangled, and sexually assaulted her. Dixon then called Jessica's father to confess before a resident assistant phoned 911. The case exposed a critical admissions failure: Dixon had concealed a prior larceny conviction and his expulsion from U.S. Navy boot camp for homicidal and suicidal tendencies on his application. It was one of two student murders at UNCW in the span of one month in 2004, prompting a national reckoning over campus admissions background checks and student-safety protocols.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
1
Injured
0
Institution
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Public Masters · NC
~10,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTPhone
Approximate reconstruction655 chars
[University of North Carolina Wilmington campus police and Wilmington Police responded shortly after 12:00 PM EDT on May 5, 2004, to reports of a death in Cornerstone Hall. The first call to authorities came from the victim's father, John Faulkner, who was called by Dixon himself. A resident assistant then called 911. UNCW in 2004 had no mass SMS or text-alert system; emergency notification to the campus community was conveyed through residence-hall staff, campus police communications, and a statement to local media issued later that afternoon. Dixon was arrested at or near the scene and posed no continuing threat to the broader campus community.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Dixon called Jessica's father to confess before any campus official was aware of the death -- an unusual sequence that shaped the initial police response
UNCW in 2004 had no mass SMS alert system; emergency information was conveyed through residence-hall staff chains and a press release
Dixon was arrested at the scene and had not threatened anyone else, so no shelter-in-place or campus-wide lockdown was issued
FOLLOW-UPEmail
Approximate reconstruction498 chars
[UNCW administrators issued a statement on May 5, 2004 confirming the death of Jessica Faulkner in Cornerstone Hall and the arrest of a fellow dormitory resident. The statement expressed condolences to the Faulkner family, confirmed there was no ongoing threat to campus, and announced that counseling services would be available. UNCW's communications in 2004 relied on email to faculty and staff, residence-hall notices, and local media; the university had no text-message mass-alert capability.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The campus statement triggered immediate questions from students and parents about UNCW's admissions screening process, since Dixon's prior record had not been discovered
A second UNCW student, Christen Naujoks, was murdered by a stalker ex-boyfriend one month later on June 4, 2004 -- the back-to-back killings intensified national scrutiny of UNCW's safety culture
Context

Background

On May 5, 2004, 18-year-old UNCW freshman Jessica Faulkner was invited to the third-floor Cornerstone Hall room of fellow freshman Curtis Dixon, 20, ostensibly to receive a gift at the end of the spring semester. Dixon beat her with a blunt instrument, strangled her, sexually assaulted her, and then injected her with a numbing drug. He then called Jessica's father to confess, setting off the chain of events that led to police arriving at Cornerstone Hall. Dixon was arrested at the scene; the death was treated as an isolated event with no continuing campus threat. The case quickly moved beyond the homicide itself when an investigation revealed that Dixon's UNCW application had been falsified: he had concealed a misdemeanor larceny conviction and -- critically -- his expulsion from U.S. Navy boot camp for documented homicidal and suicidal tendencies. His father, who served as an assistant to the chancellor at UNC Charlotte, was alleged to have helped falsify the application. The Faulkner family filed a civil lawsuit against UNCW, arguing the university's failure to conduct any background check enabled the murder. Twenty years later, campus safety advocates still cite the UNCW 2004 cases as a landmark moment in the shift toward mandatory background checks for college applicants with criminal histories. The case also illustrates that in 2004, UNCW -- like most regional public universities -- had no mass-notification system capable of reaching students quickly.
Outcome
Jessica Faulkner, 18, killed on May 5, 2004. Curtis Dixon pleaded guilty to first-degree murder. He had concealed a misdemeanor larceny conviction and his discharge from Navy boot camp for homicidal and suicidal tendencies when applying to UNCW. His father, who worked as an assistant to the chancellor at UNC Charlotte, had helped falsify portions of the application. Faulkner's parents sued UNCW for failing to conduct a background check.
Provenance

Sources

  1. national media
  2. News
  3. News
  4. Student Paper
  5. News
  6. News
Tags
murderdorm-roomadmissions-failurebackground-checkpre-alert-system2000snorth-carolinastalkingintimate-partnerstudent-safety-reform
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion