ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: SUNDAY, April 1, 1990                   TAG: 9004010048
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B9   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: RONNIE CROCKER Daily Press and Times-Herald
DATELINE: NEWPORT NEWS                                 LENGTH: Medium


COURT CLERKS CLEAN CLUE CLOSETS

A Confederate $100 bill, a bag of coins belonging to the American Legion and the bloodstained blouse of a long-forgotten murder victim were among hundreds of dusty items exhumed from a packed evidence vault in the city courthouse.

Circuit Court Clerk Rex Davis and Deputy Clerk Gary Anderson spent most of one day recently emptying the two closet-sized vaults used to store evidence from completed criminal trials. Most of the items will be destroyed; the rest will be transferred to the new city courthouse.

Davis found the blood-covered blouse under a cabinet, wrapped in a 1938 edition of the Daily Press.

The Confederate bill fell out of a stack of ledgers in a musty file cabinet.

Although state law allows evidence in criminal cases to be destroyed after all appeals are exhausted, that law hasn't been used often in Newport News, said Davis. He began working in the 41-year-old courthouse in 1971, and said the cleanup was the first destruction of evidence he's seen there.

"You could crack the door of the vault open and hold it open with one hand while you threw the new evidence on top of the stack," he said. "It had been that way for probably 10 years. The evidence went into the vault and stayed there forever."

In addition to the blouse and the bill, Davis and Anderson dug out about 300 handguns and about as many knives, as well as other evidence chronicling more than a half-century of crime in the city.

Most of the evidence found in the vault was still tagged, but other items had nothing linking them to any particular case, such as the bloodstained blouse, which was taken to the city landfill.

Some of the evidence will be saved, Davis said.

He called the local commander of the American Legion to have him pick up a bag of $32.20 in coins from a 1963 criminal case. The passage of time had obscured the nature of the offense.

"The tag just said `Property of American Legion,' " Davis said.

Paul Wilcox, a city coin dealer, said the dimes, quarters and half-dollars in the bag could be worth up to 3 1/2 times their face value because they contain 90 percent silver, unlike the coins of the same denominations made after 1964.

The nickels are worth a nickel apiece, he said. For cash and coins whose ownership cannot be determined - including several thousand dollars - the recipient will be the state Literary Fund, which provides low-interest loans for public school construction.

One item likely to stay in the clerk's office as a souvenir, however, is a folded, partly decayed $100 bill from the Confederate States of America. Davis found the note while cleaning out a cabinet.

"It came out of an area that probably hasn't been opened in 40 years," he said. Wilcox said the bill could be worth $1 or thousands of dollars, depending on its condition.

Future generations rummaging through the new courthouse's evidence lockers probably won't find such treasures.

Davis said he has instituted a new system that will prevent such pileups of evidence in the future. Each of the city's three circuit judges has an assigned clerk. Each of those clerks will have an evidence locker in the new courthouse.

"There should not be a repeat of `the pile that ate the courthouse,' " he said.



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