3
BEING HELD IN BOARDING SCHOOL DEATH
March 28, 1996
Copyright © 1996, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
By Tim O'Neil,
Of The Post-Dispatch Staff
with Patricia Rice, Susan C. Thomson, Victor Holland and Reshma
Memon Yaqun
3 BEING HELD IN
BOARDING SCHOOL DEATH
The Mountain Park
Baptist Academy is known for its good choir, polite students and resort-like
campus in the hills.
It is not known for
murder.
Late Monday afternoon,
deputies and paramedics arrived at the school and found the body of William
Andrew Futrelle II lying in a wooded area outside the boys' dormitory. His
throat had been slashed.
The 16-yr-old student
from Boca Raton, FL, also had been beaten in the face- possibly with both a
club and brick, said Wayne County Prosecutor Jon A. Kiser, who declined to
discuss a motive.
On Tuesday, an 18-yr-old
student from Bentonville, AR, Anthony Gene Rutherford, was charged with
first-degree murder and armed criminal action. Two 15-yr-old boys from
California were held for a hearing to decide whether to charge them as adults.
Kiser said Deputies
arrested the three suspects, who surrendered shortly after the body was
discovered. Police say they found a pocketknife, a piece of firewood and a
brick near the body.
Rutherford was being
held without bail in the Wayne County Jail in Greenville, said Wayne County
Sheriff Nathan Hale. The young man is the son of Benton County Judge Bruce
Rutherford of Siloam Springs, Ark. In Arkansas, a county judge is the county's
chief administrator.
Authorities would not
identify the juvenile center where the two 15-yr-olds were held; a court
hearing will be held April 4.
Kiser said Rutherford
and one of the two juveniles gave statements to investigators but wouldn't
discuss their nature.
A man who answered the phone
Wednesday at the academy said only, "For the protection of our children,
we are not giving out any information." The school is about 110 miles
south of St. Louis.
The Rev. Bobby R. Wills
a Baptist minister, and his wife, Betty, founded the Mountain Park Academy nine
years ago as a private school for troubled youths.
Bobby Wills, 60, and
Betty Wills, 58, received three-year diplomas in theology in 1976 from
Tennessee Temple University, a Bible college in Chattanooga, Tenn.
The school has about 200
students, most of them girls. It is in rural Wayne County just west of the St.
Francis River. The 165-acre campus is 12 miles east of Piedmont, south of Sam
A. Baker State Park.
The Rev. Elmo Parker is
pastor of Victory Baptist Temple in Piedmont. He said only about 30 of the
school's students are boys. The Willses opened as a school for about 30 girls
and gradually expanded the student body, Parker said. The school began
accepting boys four or five years ago.
The students, Parker
said, come from across the country, sometimes on the recommendation of juvenile
court officers.
Parker described its
curriculum as standard for junior high and high school levels, with heavy
emphasis on the Bile. The school keeps students for at least a year, and most range
in age from about 12 to 18.
Inquiring Calls
A woman at the
Independent Schools Association of the Central States in Downers Grove, Ill.,
said Mountain Park was not a member of the association.
But she recognized the name because, she said the association had
received "many, many calls" form parents seeking information about
the school over the last two years.
She said the association
had never been able to get any information about Mountain Park either from the
school itself or from nearby schools
The school has no connection with the Missouri Baptist Convention
of the Southern Baptist Convention.
The convention's
Jefferson City headquarters gets about one call a month from parents across the
country, especially from California, inquiring about the boarding school's
reputation, said Nina Patterson, a spokeswoman for the convention.
Several people wanted to
know how much access parents had to their children at the school, she said.
Because it is private, Mountain
Park Baptist Academy operates without any state supervision. Neither Missouri
Department of Elementary and Secondary Education nor the Department of Social
Services monitors the school in any way. The Department of Social Services has
never placed any children there.
"And we do not have any prior reports of problems," said
Deb Hendricks, a department spokeswoman.
The school never has
advertised itself around Piedmont and even declined a request by the local
newspaper to write a feature story after it opened. But when away from campus,
Mountain Park students do seem to have left good impressions.
"I wish the young
people of out church would behave that good all the time," said the Rev.
Elmo Parker, whose church works closely with the school.
Testimonials About God
Parker said he was with
Wills when Wills decided to buy the old cattle farm of the late Walter T.
Hawkins.
"You would never
dream anything like that would happen out there," Parker said. "But
let's face it, they are dealing with young people with problems."
The students refer to the Willses as "mama and papa,"
Parker said.
Harold Moss owns a
produce stand and delivers food to the school each week; he described the
campus as spotless and the students well mannered. "It is always 'Yes,
Sir. No, Sir,'" Moss said.
Pam Henson, a bank
teller whose grandparents owned the farm, remembered seeing the school's hand
bell choir perform at Patterson Baptist Church about two years ago.
"The choir was
well-practiced, and nobody spoke out of turn. Some of the kids gave
testimonials about how God had turned their lives around and how the academy
had given them a good place to live."
Henson noted, "They
may show up there with blue or purple hair, but it doesn't stay that way
long."
The campus is south of
Missouri Highway 34 and is not visible from any road. On Wednesday, an unmarked
blue and silver bus from the school blocked the private gravel lane.
Piedmont area residents
describe the campus as resort like with a main building of cedar, an in-ground
swimming pool and basketball courts. It has separate dormitories for boys and
girls and separate buildings for classrooms, shop and other activities.
Larry Bruce, a Wayne
County sheriff's deputy, said the department rarely receives any calls or
complaints about Mountain Park Academy. Bruce said it had received perhaps five
calls in five years for runaways and had linked car thefts to two of those
cases.
On Wednesday, relatives
made funeral arrangements for Futrelle in Wilmington, N.C.