ROANOKE TIMES

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

DATE: WEDNESDAY, July 12, 1995                   TAG: 9507120066
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B-1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: LAURA LAFAY LANDMARK NEWS SERVICE
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


OFFICIALS ARE MUM ON PRISON GUN PROBE

Virginia State Police may never solve the mystery of how a loaded gun got into the typewriter of executed inmate Willie Lloyd Turner, Public Safety Director Jerry Kilgore told members of the state Crime Commission on Tuesday.

"I'm not ... suggesting or promising definite answers," Kilgore said. "Because, as I said at the beginning of this investigation, we may never know the answers ..."

Summoned before the Crime Commission's corrections subcommittee, Kilgore, Director of Corrections Ron Angelone and State Police Superintendent Col. M. Wayne Huggins dodged questions about the gun - a loaded .32 caliber Smith & Wesson with 12 extra bullets - which was discovered in Turner's typewriter about an hour after his May 25 execution.

Because the investigation is ongoing, Kilgore said, he and the other two officials could not answer many of the commission's questions. Their refusal to do so was clearly frustrating to some members, who complained that the inquiry was taking too long, that it had become politicized, and that "the fox was in charge of the henhouse."

"It bothers me that I cannot get a straight answer as to the status of this investigation," Del. Clifton "Chip" Woodrum, D-Roanoke, said after the meeting. "I think the public is entitled to a straight answer on this one."

But Kilgore dismissed the concerns of the largely Democratic body, calling the session "just another election-year ploy by the committee."

"They're the ones that are politicizing this issue," he said. "They knew we had not completed the investigation, and they knew I would not be able to say anything definitive.

"I don't mind appearing before these committees, but let's point the finger where it needs to be pointed ... I just don't see how doing hearing after hearing on this gun issue benefits the administration. We are just trying to get to the bottom of this issue."

The saga of the gun in the typewriter began about an hour after Turner's execution when Turner's lawyer, acting on instructions from his client, opened the machine and found the firearm.

A brief probe into the matter by the Department of Corrections ended with the announcement that it was a "probable hoax" by Turner's lawyer. Three days later, Gov. George Allen assigned the case to the state police. Their inquiry, now in its sixth week, will conclude "within a two-week period," Kilgore said Tuesday.

"It's not like you're interviewing the whole world," Woodrum protested. "Or like you're looking for the Unabomber. I don't know why it's taken you more than a month. ... It would seem to me that just pure curiosity might speed your cause slightly."

Del. Howard Copeland, D-Norfolk, asked Kilgore about Michael Stokes, an inmate at the Greensville Correctional Center who says corrections officers assigned an inmate to beat him in retaliation for giving information about the gun to state police. Stokes, who was in protective custody when the beating occurred, suffered injuries requiring 32 stitches.

The Department of Corrections investigated the beating and concluded that Stokes' injuries "had nothing to do with his cooperation with the state police," Kilgore said. "That was a personal issue between the two inmates."

Copeland was skeptical. The Corrections Department has dismissed the beating the same way it dismissed the gun, he said after the meeting.

"They're down the same path of initial denial; and then, when there is public outcry, they cave and do the right thing," he said. "Again, it's internal. It's the fox in charge of the henhouse. You've got an institutional interest in exonerating the department.

``We may end up with the feds investigating this thing."



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