ACADEMY'S SUPPORTERS
PLAN TO HOLD COURTHOUSE RALLY
Friday, April 12,
1996
Copyright © 1996,
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
By Tim O'Neil Of
The Post-Dispatch Staff
ACADEMY'S SUPPORTERS PLAN TO HOLD COURTHOUSE RALLY
Supporters
of a Baptist boarding academy where a student was killed onMarch 25 have
planned a rally this morning outside the Wayne County courthouse, where a judge
is to review a juvenile officer's report on the school.
The Rev Eimo Parker,
pastor of a church in nearby Piedmont, Mo., said he expected a large crowd from
his and other area congregations to attend the rally on behalf of the Mountain
Park Baptist Church and Boarding Academ, a school for troubled youths.
The school is on 165 secluded acres about 110 miles south of St.
Louis.
Parker objected to a visit to the school Tuesday by a team of
juvenile officers and state social workers, who interviewed all of the roughly
200 students. When they left 10 hours later, 21 of the female students left
with them.
"We feel this has been a misuse of state power," said
Parker. "Do you think the state would let anyone enter their juvenile
facilities and give troubled youth the option of leaving? How many youths do
you think they'd have left?"
Parker is pastor of Victory Baptist Temple, which works closely
with the Mountain Park academy. He said many supporters of the school suspect
that Robert Barr, chief Juvenile officer in a five-county area, is trying to
force the school to close. Barr said Thursday that was not true.
"There is no move to shut the school down," Barr said.
"If my petition were to disclose allegations of abuse or neglect, the
first effort would be to correct them."
Barr filed a report with the Wayne County Circuit Court that is
based on interviews with the students Tuesday.
Circuit Judge William Camm Seay will hold a closed hearing at 9
a.m. today in Greenville, MO., the seat of Wayne County- He also will consider
the status of any of the 21 students who have not already been sent home to
their parents. Barr said Thursday afternoon that all but three girls had left
or had arranged for their travel.
Most of the school's students are girls.
On March 25, a 16-year-old male student was killed on the grounds
of the school. A senior, 18, faces a charge of first-degree murder, and
juvenile officers have commended that a 15-year-old also stand trial for murder
as an adult. Another 15-year-old has been sent to a juvenile center on a lesser
charge.
The Rev. Bobby R._Wills, who runs Mountain Park with his wife,
Betty has refused to say anything
publicly since the killing. His son, Brett Wills, said Bobby Wills would attend
the rally outside the courthouse.
A spokeswoman for Mountain Park said Thursday the school was
"rallyinq our parents and supporters."
Wills sent letters to parents on April 1, giving some details
about the killing and asking them to discuss it with their children "only
once in a passing manner."
"Because of our refusal to grant access to the press, we have
received much criticism from the media, even to the point of being called a
cult," Wills' letter says.
The student who was killed was William A. Futrelle II of Boca
Raton, Fla. Anthony G. Rutherford, 18, of Siloam Springs, Ark., is charged.