TRIAL FOR TEEN
OPENS IN KILLING OF 16-YEAR-OLD AT YOUTH HOME
Copyright (c)
1997, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Tuesday,
September 30, 1997
SOURCE:
Associated Press
TRIAL FOR TEEN
OPENS IN KILLING OF 16-YEAR-OLD AT YOUTH HOME
HIS ATTORNEY SAYS
HE'S PREPARED DEFENSE BASED ON MENTAL ILLNESS
A teen-ager from California faces
life in prison without parole if he's found guilty of killing a classmate at a
Baptist boarding school for troubled youths in southeast Missouri.
Jury selection was completed Monday
afternoon in the first-degree murder trial of Joseph Stanley Burris, 16, of
Granada Hills, Calif.
Burris is the second teen to stand
trial in the death of William A. Futrelle II, 16, of Boca Raton, Fla.
Anthony Gene Rutherford, 19, of
Siloam Springs, Ark., was convicted in May and sentenced to life in prison
without parole.
Burris, who was 15 at the time of
the killing, was certified to stand trial as an adult.
Missouri law prohibits prosecutors
from seeking the death penalty for those who are younger than 16 at the time of
the offense.
Futrelle was attacked on March 25,
1996, at the Mountain Park Baptist Church and Boarding Academy near Patterson,
about 110 miles south of St. Louis. His throat was slashed with a pocketknife,
and he was beaten about the head, apparently to keep him from disclosing a
bizarre plot to take over the school, authorities said.
Burris pleaded innocent and innocent
by mental disease or defect.
"The primary emphasis will be
on the not guilty by mental disease or defect," said Burris' lawyer, James
Bowles of Piedmont, Mo.
The trial, which is being held in
Pulaski County on a change of venue from Wayne County, is expected to continue
through Friday.
Meanwhile, a third suspect, also
from California, has been committed to the Missouri Division of Youth Services
until age 18 for concealing a crime, a felony.