The case stems from an incident on October 18, 1996, when Bowling died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound during a game of Russian roulette at his home. Storey brought a revolver to Bowling’s house, and the two boys began playing with it. While on the phone with his girlfriend, Bowling loaded the gun, spun the chamber, and fatally shot himself.
However, Floyd County detectives Dallas Battle and David Stewart allegedly created a narrative suggesting that Storey had murdered Bowling. They claimed the shooting was a revenge killing orchestrated by Storey and Clark, who were supposedly members of a gang called the Free Birds. According to the lawsuit, the detectives went so far as to exhume Bowling’s body and alter a note left by his friends, changing the word “narcs” to suggest the shooting was linked to a prior crime.
Additionally, Storey claims the detectives pressured Angela Bruce, a witness, to falsely testify that Storey had confessed to the murder. Bruce was allegedly threatened with the removal of her children unless she cooperated. Furthermore, the detectives are accused of coercing a sexual relationship with Bruce. They also allegedly obtained false testimony from a hearing-impaired and nearly illiterate man to further implicate Storey and Clark. The county coroner, who didn’t hold a medical license, allegedly conducted a sham autopsy and charged the Bowling family for an autopsy that was never performed.