OFFICER
INVESTIGATES SCHOOL WHERE TEEN WAS SLAIN
Thursday, April 4, 1996
Copyright (c) 1996, St. Louis Post-Dispatch used by permission
By Tim O'Neil Of the Post-Dispatch Staff
OFFICER
INVESTIGATES SCHOOL WHERE TEEN WAS SLAIN
A Missouri juvenile court officer has begun an inquiry into
disciplinary methods and work routines of a private boarding school for
troubled youths where a student was killed March 25.
The school. Mountain Park Baptist Church and Boarding Academy, is
about 110 miles south of St. Louis in eastern Wayne County. Three fellow
students were held in the death of William A. Futrelle II, 16, of Boca Raton,
Fla., whose throat was slashed and head bludgeoned.
A Highway Patrol investigator has said the suspects were afraid
Futrelle would foil their plan to take over the school and get on national
television.
The first court appearances were scheduled for today.
Roger Barr, chief juvenile officer for Missouri's 42nd judicial
circuit, said he toured the school for two hours Tuesday. Barr said it appears
to be well maintained. He planned to interview students and former students.
"The accommodations are above reproach, and the facility is
nonrestrictive. These kids are not prisoners," Barr said Wednesday.
"We want to know more about the forms of discipline and the types of work
these children do. The juvenile court can act if conditions are injurious. We
can remove any child if we believe it isn't a safe environment."
To do that, Barr would have to seek a court order. Barr said the
operators of Mountain Park Baptist Academy had been cooperative, but he warned
that he could seek a court order if that cooperation ceased.
In a related development, the Missouri Division of Family Services
said that it received a call to its child abuse hot line after the death
alleging lack of supervision at the facility. An agency team that investigates
abuse and neglect in group settings will examine the school, a spokeswoman said.
Anthony G. Rutherford, 18, of Siloam Springs, Ark., has been
charged with first-degree murder. He is to appear in the Wayne County
courthouse today for a hearing to ensure that he has legal counsel and to
consider a date for a preliminary hearing.
The court also is to have a separate, private hearing for one of
two 15-yr-year-old boys from California whom juvenile authorities are holding.
Barr said his office would ask the court to certify one to stand trial for
murder as an adult but remand the other to juvenile detention on a lesser
felony charge of concealing a crime.
Barr said Wayne County Circuit Judge J. Max Price has ordered the
youth who faces a murder charge to undergo psychiatric evaluation.
The Rev. Bobby Wills, who runs the school, has been unavailable
for comment since the killing. His supporters in Wayne County and in
Hattiesburg, Miss., where he operated a similar school until 1987, have said
Wills and his wife,
Betty, use a combination of biblical studies and regimented
discipline, including paddling, to turn around troubled youths.
Corporal punishment is legal in Missouri. Barr said the court
would investigate its application if students were bruised or struck anywhere
but on the buttocks.
Barr's office is in Salem, Mo., and his five-county district
includes Wayne
County. The Willses closed their former school, the Bethesda
School for Girls, after the Forrest County, Miss., Youth Court took over the
school in 1986.
That court said Wills had no right to detain children in his
school without court orders. The school there had high fences around the
dormitory buildings.
Barr said the only fences he saw at Mountain Park were around the
swimming pool and recreation courts. He said he did not see any fence behind
the girls' dormitory, as a state fire marshal had reported seeing last year.
Jimmy Henderson, a state fire marshal, said he toured the school
last April
25. Henderson said he had seen a small yard behind the girls'
dormitory that was enclosed by a high fence topped with razor wire. Henderson
said Wednesday he hadn't been to the school since then.
Henderson said the school's enrollment one year ago was 219 girls
and 26 boys. Barr said the school now has about 200 girls and 30 boys.
Henderson said he recommended 15 improvements to the school,
including always keeping its sprinkler system turned on, installing more
exterior doors to the girls' dormitory and rerouting the exhaust stack from the
kitchen stove hood. He said the school later wrote that it would consider his
ideas.
Defendant Rutherford's father is Bruce Rutherford, the presiding administrative
judge of Benton County in far northwestern Arkansas. The elder Rutherford has
declined to comment.