YOUTH GETS LIFE
IN SCHOOL MURDER
Copyright (c) 1997, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Wednesday, June 11, 1997
SOURCE: Associated Press
YOUTH GETS LIFE
IN SCHOOL MURDER
HE KILLED
CLASSMATE AT CHRISTIAN ACADEMY
An Arkansas teen-ager was sentenced
Tuesday to life in prison with no chance of parole for killing a classmate at a
rural Missouri school for troubled youths.
Anthony G. Rutherford, 19, of Siloam
Springs, Ark., was convicted last month of first-degree murder and armed
criminal action. The case was moved to Pulaski County on a change of venue.
Rutherford is one of two teens
charged in the death of William A. Futrelle II at the Mountain Park Baptist
Church and Boarding Academy in March 1996.
Joseph S. Burris, 16, of Los
Angeles, faces the same charges. His trial is expected to begin the week of
June 30.
Rutherford had waived his right to a
jury trial, allowing Pulaski County Circuit Judge Douglas Long Jr. to decide
his fate. In return, the prosecution waived the death penalty.
In addition to life in prison
without parole, the judge sentenced Rutherford to 50 years in prison for the
armed criminal action conviction, to run consecutively.
During trial, Wayne County
Prosecutor Jon Kiser relied heavily on a videotaped confession Rutherford gave
police the night of the killing.
In the videotape, Rutherford said he
wanted to kill Futrelle to prevent him from getting in the way of his plan to
take over the school and start a cult like the Branch Davidians.
Futrelle, 16, of Boca Raton, Fla.,
was found dead in a wooded area at the boarding school near Patterson, Mo.,
about 110 miles south of St. Louis. His throat was slashed and his head beaten
repeatedly.