NO TRESPASSING
Monday, April 15, 1996
Copyright © 1996, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
By Tim O'Neil Of The Post-Dispatch
NO TRESPASSING
SECLUSION SUITS
LEADER OF STRICT BAPTIST ACADEMY
The Mountain Park Baptist Church and Boarding Academy is
well-built and tidy. Strict routine and discipline govern student life. The
wooded campus is far away from the big, bad world.
That's exactly how the Rev. Bobby R. Wills wants it. He runs the private
school for troubled teen-agers with his wife, Betty, and has sought since 1987
to stay as far from the news as he can.
But on March 25, a 16-year-old male student from Florida was
killed, allegedly by two fellow students. Wills and Mountain Park hunkered
down, making no comments. A bus was parked across the driveway to keep away reporters.
Last Friday, 160 of Mountain Park's students and 130 of their
parents
rallied outside the Wayne County Courthouse in a well-organized
showing of
support for the school. Later that day. Wills spoke briefly and
had his son,
Brett, give a tour of the campus to the Post-Dispatch.
Wills, 60, said he couldn't say much because Circuit Judge William
Camm Seay is reviewing a juvenile officer's report on conditions and treatment
at the school. On Friday, while the rally was under way outside the courthouse,
Seay held a 4 1/2-hour closed hearing. He is to resume the case Tuesday.
Roger Barr, chief juvenile officer for a five-county circuit, led
a team of 19 officers and social workers onto the campus last Tuesday. After 10
hours of interviewing almost all of the roughly 200 students, 21 of the girls volunteered
to leave.
The hearing Friday concerned general conditions and the future of
four or five of those girls, some of whose parents want them back at Mountain
Park. Barr has said he cannot disclose details because the case is a juvenile matter.
Wills called Barr's visit a "raid."
The school is built along a hillside on a 165-acre former cattle
farm just over a ridge from the St. Francis River, about 110 miles south of St.
Louis.
Mountain Park is 12 miles east of Piedmont, Wayne County's biggest
town, and about as far away from Greenville, the county seat.
Either way, a trip to the school requires a five-mile ride up and
down steep hills on a gravel road.
"This is hard to run away from," said Rod Bristol of
Seattle, whose 16-year-old son attends the school. "It redefines the
meaning of being in the Ozarks sticks."
Bristol approves of that. Wills said the remoteness keeps away
outside influences, as does his prohibition against radio and television.
"I was raised a country boy, and I think that's the best situation for
young people," Wills said.
Wills said he runs the school "totally on Christianity."
The students use a Christian independent-study program and sit side by side
while the teachers work individually with them. If a student needs help, he or
she raises a small Christian flag, white with a red cross in a small blue
field.
The boys and girls study and eat in separate areas, usually at
separate times.
There are about 30 boys and 170 girls.
Students get up at 6 a.m. every day and go to bed at 9 p.m. The
day is organized with set schedules of class times, Bible studies, prayer
services and recreation. They have regular work routines. Boys and girls wash
laundry.
Girls work in the kitchen, boys work outdoors on such chores as
hauling and stacking the pre-cut firewood for the outdoor furnaces that fire
the hot-water heating system. Adults stoke the furnaces.
Controls are regular and strict. Brett Wills showed the mail room,
where staff members read all mail going in and out. Discipline can include
spanking on the buttocks with a wooden paddle.
Several parents said Friday they were told that Barr's report
complains of excessive corporal punishment and inadequate medical treatment.
Sam Gerhardt, the Willses' son-in-law, said paddling is "rare and as a
last resort to absolute defiance. We prefer to talk."
The 11-building campus is a mix of building designs that resembles
a well-kept Ozarks resort. The boys live in a two-story rustic-wood building that
looks like a farmhouse with a large porch. Their bunk beds are on the second
floor, an open barracks room. There is no fence around the house.
Nearby are four private residences for the Wills family members. A
few of the 30-member staff live in rooms near the girls' dormitory.
Farther up the hill, the girls live in a two-story brick dormitory
that has interior connections to the office building, the study areas and the cafeteria.
The girls also sleep on bunk beds in four large open rooms. Their walls have
flowered wallpaper, and the furnishings and lavatory areas are like those of a
college dormitory. Most of the girls also have at least one stuffed animal atop
their beds.
The windows to the girls' dorm and adjoining study rooms are made
of glass block. Two courtyards leading from the girls' dorm, one with
basketball hoops and the other with a small swimming pool, are surrounded by
high chain-link fences. Both dorms are air-conditioned.
Gerhardt said there are solid reasons for open sleeping quarters.
"It keeps things in the open," he said. "Nobody can
hide. And the idea of positive peer pressure certainly is important. We preach
to them and tell them the truth, but the real sharing of ministry and faith
takes place student to student."
The student who was killed was William A. Futrelle II of Boca
Raton, Fla.
His body was found in woods downhill from the girls' dormitory,
not near the boys' dormitory as was reported previously.
Anthony G. Rutherford, 18, of Siloam Springs, is in the Wayne
County jail on a charge of first-degree murder. Barr, the juvenile officer, has
recommended that one 15-year-old face a murder charge as an adult. A second 15-year-old
has been remanded to the state juvenile system on a lesser charge.