ROANOKE TIMES

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

DATE: SATURDAY, December 18, 1993                   TAG: 9312180119
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B-3   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: ADRIENNE PETTY STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: ROCKY MOUNT                                LENGTH: Medium


COUNSELING ORDERED IN TRESPASSING CASE

A man charged with trespassing while the Franklin County Sheriff's Department was investigating a Peeping Tom complaint at Ferrum College was ordered Friday to seek counseling.

Arnold Bays Dillon Jr., 24, of Rocky Mount admitted to investigators that he had looked through a peephole into the women's locker room at the college, but said he did not see anyone. However, he was not charged with peeping, because he was not seen looking through the peephole, Commonwealth's Attorney Cliff Hapgood said.

Also, the case does not fit the state code's peeping statute, he said.

"It's a peeping case in the sense that somebody looked through something, but it's not a peeping case in the sense that the Virginia statute has a hole in it about six miles wide," Hapgood said.

The code allows a person to be charged with peeping or spying if the person looks through a window, door or other opening of a home or dwelling. Even a car or a van, if someone lives in it, would qualify as a dwelling. But no one lives in Ferrum's gymnasium.

An investigator sent to the college after a Peeping Tom complaint spotted Dillon while he was looking for a place in the gym to install a hidden camera, Sheriff W.Q. "Quint" Overton said earlier.

Ferrum College administrators notified the Sheriff's Office that someone had created a peephole by removing a deadbolt from a door leading from the women's locker room to a seldom-used corridor.

General District Court Judge Lee Stillwell said there was enough evidence to find Dillon guilty, but withheld sentencing on the condition that Dillon attend counseling sessions. The judge told the counselor to report regularly to the court.



 by CNB