ROANOKE TIMES

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

DATE: SATURDAY, October 1, 1994                   TAG: 9410030059
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: C-4   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: WARREN FISKE and ROBERT LITTLE STAFF WRITERS
DATELINE: STAFFORD                                 LENGTH: Medium


MEMORIES ARE HAZY OF NORTH'S ENCOUNTER WITH GUN-TOTING TEEN

Oliver North, who bills himself as a tough law-and-order candidate, apparently isn't afraid to take justice into his own hands.

Proof lies within a yellowed ledger in the back room of the Stafford County courthouse, which notes that a criminal complaint against North was dismissed in early 1975.

No other documentation of the incident - not even the nature of the charge - is available. The case file was destroyed along with all of the county's General District Court records for a nine-month period that ended in August 1975.

North, during a recent interview, said the case sprang from a night when a teen-ager armed with a rifle fired at his car, shattering the driver's side window. North said he chased down the youth and ``used sufficient force to render his gun useless.''

At the time, North was living in Stafford and stationed at Quantico Marine Base.

North said he was driving near the base when the shot was fired. His son, Stuart, then about 3, was in the car. No one was hurt.

``He was doing what kids do as pranks, I suppose,'' North said of the shooter. ``He was probably shooting at my car, but not necessarily expecting it would shatter the window.''

North said he slammed on the brakes and pursued the youth. ``As I recall, I smashed the young man's gun against a tree or a rock,'' North said.

Did he beat up the youth? ``I may have had some nontraditional punishment words with him, but I seriously doubt that I took much further steps than were necessary to render the gun harmless,'' North said.

Shortly after the incident, North said he learned that ``there were those who were going to press charges'' against him. He said he hired a Marine lawyer who ``spoke to other lawyers and made the whole thing go away.''

North said his recollection of the 19-year-old incident is hazy. He said he cannot recall the names of the youth who fired at his car, his attorney or the people who wanted to file a complaint against him.

``This may come as a surprise to you, but I've had several far more exciting and notable events in my life,'' North said.

North said he does not recall being formally charged in connection with the incident, and that he did not press charges against the teen-ager.

County law enforcement officials said they do not remember the incident, noting that North was not famous at the time. ``I knew hundreds and hundreds of Marines,'' said Dick Ashby, sheriff in the mid-1970s. ``I wouldn't remember anything like that.''

Commonwealth's Attorney Daniel M. Chichester, who took office in 1971, also drew a blank, but he said the youth almost certainly would have been charged with a felony for shooting into a car. No such charge was filed in Stafford County's General District or Circuit Court in 1974 or 1975, though such a charge could have been lodged in Juvenile Court, whose records are not open to the public.

Circuit Court Clerk Thomas Moncure said records of the incident probably were discarded two years ago to create additional space. Under state law, District Court records can be destroyed after 10 years.

The drawer for 1974-75 General District Court cases remains empty while records from earlier dates remain on file. Moncure attributes that to the random way in which records are purged.

Former neighbors said North never mentioned his encounter with the teen-ager. ``Knowing the way Larry was, it wouldn't surprise me, though,'' said Neil Mayhew, referring to North by the name used by family and close friends. ``Some things he just didn't talk about.''

North said he cannot recall the approximate date of the incident, although records suggest the complaint was dismissed in March 1975.

He said the incident is not related to his hospitalization for psychiatric counseling in December 1974, shortly after he returned from a tour of duty in Southeast Asia. North said the counseling was because of marital difficulties he was experiencing.

``I'm constantly amazed by the things you guys think are important,'' he told a reporter.

``Let me ask you this: What would your response be if you're driving home late at night and your kid's in your car and someone shoots through your window?'' he asked. ``I'm just curious; would you drive away and wave at him?''



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