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CORRECTION - 10/24/07 - A statistic in a Review-Journal story Monday about first lady Dawn Gibbons was mischaracterized. Nearly 18 percent of high school juniors have tried methamphetamine.

AT HOME IN MANSION

10 months as first lady has had its ups, downs

CARSON CITY -- First lady Dawn Gibbons knows this should be the best time of her life.

On a recent sunny afternoon at the Governor's Mansion, prison trustees were putting up Halloween decorations in expectation of the arrival of several thousand trick-or-treaters. The governor's 2-year-old granddaughter dropped by for lunch. The food in the place is so good she banned her husband from eating any more ice cream.


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  • This might be a happy day, but the 53-year-old has experienced a good deal of stress in her 10 months as first lady.

    The popularity ratings of her governor-husband, Jim, remain lower than American support for the war in Iraq. And about the time they were moving into the mansion in January, the Wall Street Journal reported a federal grand jury was investigating whether Jim Gibbons took bribes when he was in Congress.

    Jim Gibbons is being investigated on charges he accepted money, trips and gifts from Warren Trepp, a Reno businessman, in exchange for helping him secure federal contracts.

    They had to take out a line of credit on their paid-off Reno home to pay for some of the legal costs.

    "It hasn't been fun. It affects you," said Dawn Gibbons, 53.

    "People will believe what they will believe. A lot of people have no hope. We have hope. This is a nice house we live in."

    She stops a tour of the mansion at a display that holds the gaudy electric guitar she paid a Lovelock prison inmate $2,000 to create for her husband.

    It rests next to the governor's old Beatles and Bobby Vee records, the Kingsmen's recording of "Louie Louie" -- notorious at the time for supposed obscene lyrics -- and the guitar Gibbons played from the time he was a teenager.

    Sometimes Dawn Gibbons wishes for the days when she ran several Reno businesses, fended off requests for dates and the future governor was a wannabe rock star.

    She recalls a day 24 years ago when she operated a wedding chapel and a flower shop in Reno and had just begun dating Gibbons, then an airline pilot and a lawyer.

    "He sent me this huge beautiful bouquet of flowers," she said.

    But on the day she received the flowers, a snowstorm blocked a bus carrying flowers she had ordered for her business.

    That afternoon, a prospective bridegroom kept handing her twenties and insisted his bride have flowers as they waited for the minister to arrive.

    Dawn Gibbons knew the first rule of any business -- keep the customer happy.

    That night Jim Gibbons inquired about what happened to his flowers. "I had to tell him. All I can say is he didn't give me flowers again for a very long time."

    For Dawn Gibbons the Governor's Mansion remains her "home away from home." And it is that only because their four dogs are there. They built a special run for them in the backyard.

    Their actual home is a 25-minute drive away, in southwestern Reno.

    Jim Gibbons may be governor, but his wife says he is a "very shy" man who still returns to their Reno home on Sundays to mow their 2.75-acre lawn.

    Despite refinancing the Reno home to pay for legal expenses, the first couple still could afford to buy 40 acres near Lamoille Canyon in Elko County in August for $575,000.

    They financed that purchase by trading other property they owned and using Gibbons' congressional pension. Eventually they will build a home and retire there. Dawn Gibbons admits she is more of a city person, but will go along with the move into cow country.

    Her tenure as first lady has seen some missteps.

    Just before her husband took office on Jan. 1, she proclaimed there would be no alcohol in the mansion as long as she was first lady.

    The University of Nevada, Reno athletic boosters who frequently use the mansion and adjacent Nevada Room for fundraising events, quickly complained. The booze ban was lifted.

    "We really don't drink," Gibbons says, showing the stash of wine hidden away in the mansion's wine cellar. "Jim has a glass of wine once in a while, but I have never served it. I would rather get kicked around and criticized than hearing the first lady is a boozer."

    During the governor's campaign last October, Jim Gibbons was accused by 32-year-old cocktail waitress Chrissy Mazzeo of pushing her against a parking garage wall and making unwanted sexual advances. Gibbons told police he only helped Mazzeo up after she had fallen.

    The incident occurred after Jim Gibbons, Mazzeo, political consultant Sig Rogich and others had been drinking in a Las Vegas restaurant. Gibbons told police he drank two glasses of wine, although a waitress said there had been heavy drinking by people at the table. No charges were brought against Gibbons in the incident.

    Dawn Gibbons says there is an important reason for her to remain a teetotaler. She wants to be a positive role model for people, especially those who might be prone to addiction.

    "Alcohol is a gateway drug. Make no mistake. It is not marijuana that is the gateway drug for meth users. It is alcohol."

    Combating addiction to methamphetamine has become a crusade for the former four-term Assembly member. She travels the state to give speeches to anyone who will listen about the dangers of methamphetamine.

    Nearly 18 percent of high school students have tried meth, she said. "That is a crisis."

    Dawn Gibbons sometimes is accompanied by a young woman whose meth-induced stupor caused her to forget she left the water running while her 9-month-old baby was in a bathtub.

    "She didn't have to get to the bathtub to realize she had killed her son," Dawn Gibbons said. The woman received a prison term and came out eager to share her story about the dangers of meth use.

    What makes kicking meth especially hard is that fact the high has been measured at five times as pleasurable as sex, Dawn Gibbons said.

    Rehabilitation isn't easy. People need to spend about 18 months in rehab, and it takes another five or six years to overcome the urge to try it again. Most users relapse.

    The drug ruins the lives of the wealthy, as well as the poor, Dawn Gibbons said.

    One only need to look at the situation of former Sierra Nevada College President James Lee Ash as an example.

    An ordained minister and a scholar, Ash was arrested in a cheap Sparks motel in 2002. Police found meth and needles. He was getting high with an 18-year-old companion.

    Ash, now 62, would be arrested three more times in the following two years, enter and fail a rehab program and finally be incarcerated at Southern Desert Correctional Center. He was paroled earlier this year.

    It's because of people like Ash that Dawn Gibbons can focus on her crusade against meth and not dwell on whether the Trepp investigation will end with an indictment of her husband.

    "No matter how hard I think life is, some people have it worse," she said.

    Contact Review-Journal Capital Bureau Chief Ed Vogel at evogel@reviewjournal.com or (775) 687-3901.

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    Report abuse

    Joanne wrote on October 29, 2007 05:29 PM: Dawn Gibbons is more than a boozer. She is a flat-out embarrassment as First Lady and a gift to the Nevada Democrat Party. It is not a secret in Reno that she has problems with drugs herself. We also cringe when she speaks to the public. She fumbles, makes goofy faces, and is an all-out embarrassment. I hope the doctor in Reno makes her testify. It will be fun to watch her air her dirty laundry and perjure herself on the stand.


    Report abuse

    sam dehne wrote on October 23, 2007 07:38 AM: Vote Stealing Rapists will be caught.

    AutoLink: www.CleanElectionsLawsuit.Com


    Report abuse

    Guy Felton wrote on October 23, 2007 06:03 AM: For Reality Check:

    You said: "Face it already. Gibbons won the election because he got more votes than Titus."

    This can not be proved. Nevada uses Sequoia touch-screen voting machines just like those that have been decertified in California. These machines are dirty; they can be easily rigged to throw elections! Computer experts say so.

    Nevada government suffers from a culture of corruption. Our dirty voting machines are only the tip of the iceburg.

    Guy Felton, Webmaster
    www.CleanElectionsLawsuit.Com
    1 of 150 plaintiffs in this suit



    Report abuse

    Reality Check 2 wrote on October 23, 2007 01:21 AM: The only real reason that Gibbons won the election last November..(Black-Tuesday,henceforth)...and ,quasimoto,by a MEAGER and slim 4 Percent ,is the simple fact that a few thousand FOOLS who never really knew better in the COW-COUNTIES...ELKO,ETC.....Holy crap,why duya think W-ya flew Airforce 1 into Freaking Elko 2 days B4 Gin Gibby was elected last November....Theeir number crunchers knew exactly where the weakest-minded-fools were....and they staged a hoe-down to mollify-the brain-dead fools


    Report abuse

    Reality Check wrote on October 22, 2007 09:26 PM: I have to agree that Jim and Dawn are a little lacking in integrity. Just ask Kenny Guinn. And somebody owns old Jimbo on energy and probably some other issues.
    But, hey, y'all in the Gibbons-must-go crowd have pretty much lost the battle. Face it already. Gibbons won the election because he got more votes than Titus.
    And, at least Dawn has the guts to tackle a real issue.


    Report abuse

    sam dehne wrote on October 22, 2007 08:30 PM: "What makes kicking meth especially hard is that fact the high has been measured at five times as pleasurable as sex, Dawn Gibbons said."
    Sex with who?

    Is this another "indictment" of the governator?


    Sam


    Report abuse

    real estate contract wrote on October 22, 2007 05:58 PM: This is exactly why we get so few good people (not to say that the Gibbons' are not good people) to run for office. Who in their right mind would want to put up with the likes of the posters here on a daily basis?

    Real Estate Contract<


    Report abuse

    Obrerver2 wrote on October 22, 2007 04:53 PM: One can only wonder if Jim or Dawn can produce an authentic cancelled check or some other form of payment in the amount of $2000.00 for this exotic guitar back in '04 whilst Jim was in congress and secured much needed fedgov grant funding for the state prison luthier(guitar-crafting..)..program that was facing closure due to funding issues..??To see the subject guitar in question,go to:http://www.angelfire.com/art3/xula/
    This website is now defunct,but back in '03 and '04 state inmates were producing top-flight -rock-star-grade-exotic guitars...Jim's guitar is the blue one which is fifth from left...the one with the solid gold congressional seal atop the fretboard,and adorned with real Carson City silver dollars meticously inletted on the body, and in addition bears genuine mother-of-pearl inlays that are custom inset to form Jim's signature on the body...Those in the industry and bussines of custom guitars have stated that this custom-one-of-a -kind-precious-metal-masterpiece is worth well north of $10,000.00.Xula instruments(the prison luthier/guitar program)was shut-down by state prison officials when it was audited in late '04 and subsequently discovered that literaly tens of thousands of dollars in raw materials..(exotic-hardwoods and fixtures)..and finished products..(exotic and custom guitars)..were unaccounted for.This in turn led to the arrest of the state employee whom at the time was responsible for oversight of Xula Instruments at the prison;said individual made bail and has since disappeared..


    Report abuse

    . wrote on October 22, 2007 03:42 PM: .


    Report abuse

    LOL wrote on October 22, 2007 03:41 PM: I'm sorry, she sounds like a complete idiot. She and her husband both, are a joke..


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