MINISTER RAN
SCHOOL BEFORE BAPTIST ACADEMY
March 29,1996
copyright © 1996,
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
by Tim O'Neil of
The Post-Dispatch staff
MINISTER RAN
SCHOOL BEFORE BAPTIST ACADEMY
A Baptist minister whose school for
troubled youths was the site of a killing had closed a similar school in
Mississippi in 1987 after losing a lengthy battle with that state.
The Rev. Bobby Wills and his wife,
Betty Wills, run the Mountain Park Baptist Church and Boarding School about 12
miles east of Piedmont, in southeastern Missouri. On Monday afternoon, a
16-year-old male student was found slain outside the boys' dormitory. Three
fellow students were arrested.
The school is in Wayne County, about
110 miles south of St. Louis.
The victim, William Andrew Futrelle
II, 16, of Boca Raton, Fla., is to be buried today in Wilmington, N.C.
Investigator's said Futrelle's throat had been cut and his head had been
beaten. They found a 4-inch knife, club and brick near his body.
Anthony G. Rutherford, 18, of Siloam
Springs, Ark., was held without bond on charges of first-degree murder and
armed criminal action. Two 15-year-old fellow male students from California may
also face charges as adults.
Investigators have declined to
discuss a motive. The school has declined to comment on the killing or the
conflict in Mississippi.
Wills opened Mountain Park some time
after he began buying the school's 164-acre tract in Wayne County in August
1987. Until that year, he had operated the Christian Life Boarding Academy
south of Hattiesburg, Miss.
In September 1986, a youth court
judge in Forrest County, Miss., ordered the Mississippi Department of Public
Welfare to take emergency custody of the 117 residents of Christian Life. One
month later, Wills was convicted of civil contempt for failure to turn over
information about his students.
The clash was between the court's
insistence that only it could confine minors and Wills' claim that he was
protected by religious liberties. At the height of the fuss, the Rev. Jerry
Falwell flew to Hattiesburg and led a rally in support of Wills.
Until then, Wills had called his
school the Bethesda Home for Girls. He had opened it in 1972.
Lawyers for Wills fought the
contempt conviction all the way to the Mississippi Supreme Court. Wills
contended that the state had no right to regulate a church-run school. But in
1988, that court affirmed the conviction, and Wills' $44 million suit in
federal court against the youth court judge and guardians was thrown out later
that year.
According to lawyers in Mississippi
and articles published back then by the Jackson, Miss. Clarion-Ledger, and the
youth court in Hattiesburg had determined in 1984 that Wills ran a detention
center because students were confined to grounds. The court said the school was
subject to court review of the status of all students.
The contempt order did not relate
directly to the treatment of students. But during the controversy, Wills signed
a federal-court consent decree banning the use of paddling pregnant residents
and forced confinement in his school. That decree ended a separate lawsuit on
behalf of a former student that was filed in 1982 by Morris Dees, head of the
Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Ala.
In Missouri, the state does not
monitor private, religious schools. Daniel Wise, a former special youth judge
in Hattiesburg who issued the order allowing Mississippi to take custody of Wills'
students, said Thursday he believed that's why Wills moved to Missouri.
Wills' school in Mississippi got
many of its students from other states. His Mountain Park School also gets most
of its students from other states.
The Missouri Division of Youth Services
has received no complaints about treatment at Mountain Park School. The Wayne
County sheriff's office has said it has handled only an occasional case
involving a runaway.
But Mountain Park does have a
dispute with Wayne County. The county cancelled the school's tax exemption for
1995 and billed the school $9,766 in property taxes that were due Dec. 31. The
school has yet to pay or file a protest, the county collector's office
reported.
County assessor Don Kemp said he
proposed revoking the tax exemption after the school built a home in 1994 that
Kemp valued at $132,000. He said the school also built a home in 1993 that he
valued at $90,300. Kemp said the Willses and one of their sons live in the two
homes.
"We put it back on the tax
rolls because we think it's a commercial operation rather than a
nonprofit,"" Kemp said Thursday. "I wanted proof of the cash
flow."
Kemp said the school never had
provided information about its revenue or assets.