Of note to former Hokies…

An escaped prisoner has killed two people in Blacksburg, Virginia and is still on the loose; Virginia Tech is shut down and the town is on alert.

Edit at 2:55 PM CDT: They got him! Captured in the woods near Tech Center Drive.


(From: http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke/wb/79080)
Officer killed this morning; manhunt on Virginia Tech campus
Sunday’s hospital shooting suspect still sought as second shooting incident occurs just after 7 a.m.
By Amy L. Kovac, Angela Manese-Lee, Matt Gentry, Albert Raboteau, Donna Alvis-Banks and Shay Barnhart
UPDATED noon

Downtown Blacksburg is quiet, though police are patroling College Avenue and other areas. The ongoing search for William Morva is the topic of conversation in restaurants and coffee shops, and everyone seems to have a cell phone glued to their ear. People who know William Morva recall the stomach problems that kept him from working, his struggles to get by financially and his self-described survivalist skills. Acquaintances say he studied military tactics and talked about living in the Jefferson National Forest.

Many people said they planned to stay downtown because it felt safer than heading home.

“I called my mom and said ‘I’m OK,'” said Elizabeth Spencer, a Virginia Tech junior from Richmond. “I don’t want to go home because I’d be alone.”

UPDATED 11:45 a.m.
Montgomery County schools do not begin classes until Wednesday, but teachers and staff who are preparing for the coming year have been sent home from Blacksburg schools today because of the Morva situation, schools Superintendent Tiffany Anderson said. No other districts affected.

UPDATED 11:26 a.m.
Blacksburg New School, which is located near the area police are searching, has closed for the day.

UPDATED 11:12 a.m.
Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputy Eric Sutphin, who died after being shot this morning, had been wounded in 2003 while exchanging gunfire with a man who had just shot and killed a Christiansburg police officer. He received the state Medal of Valor for his role in the incident. He left police work following the shooting, but returned to the force the following year. A link to a 2005 profile of Sutphin is at left below.

UPDATED 11:07 a.m.
Police have confirmed that the officer shot this morning has died, and identified him as Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputy Eric Sutphin.

UPDATED 10:42 a.m.
The Montgomery County Courthouse in Christiansburg is closed until further notice in connection with the hunt for William Morva, county spokesman Robert Parker confirmed. Police from multiple agencies continue to search sections of Virginia Tech campus and Blacksburg for Morva.

UPDATED 10:30 a.m.

BLACKSBURG — A law enforcement officer was shot this morning near the head of the Huckleberry Trail near the Blacksburg Public Library and police station.

The suspect in the shooting, William Morva, remains at large and a manhunt has closed a section of Blacksburg and the Virginia Tech campus. Officers from multiple police agencies have been searching for Morva using a helicopter and dogs.

Police are now surrounding Tech’s Squires Student Center. Police radio traffic indicates someone fitting Morva’s description was seen inside.

Morva also is accused of killing a security guard at Montgomery Regional Hospital early Sunday. The killing came after Morva, who had been in Montgomery County Jail awaiting trial on charges of trying to rob a store last year, was taken to the emergency room in the early morning hours Sunday. He attacked the deputy guarding him, took his gun, and shot the security guard, according to police.

Police said this morning Morva is wearing a tie-dyed T-shirt and khaki shorts and had a white sheet wrapped around him. He is barefoot.

The condition of the officer who was shot this morning around 7:15 a.m. is not known, a Blacksburg police spokesman said.

Virginia Tech spokesman Larry Hincker said the campus is closed for the day. All students are urged to return to their dorms or off-campus apartments. Staff were told to remain in their offices. Hincker said there have been no confirmed sightings of Morva on campus. Reports of a hostage situation at Squires Student Center are unfounded. Squires has been shut down and will remain shut down. It had been searched by police.

The Blacksburg Public Library downtown has been closed.
Early Monday morning on Southgate Drive under the Huckleberry Trail, law officers were on the lookout for William Morva. <p class=Matt Gentry | The Roanoke Times

Early Monday morning on Southgate Drive under the Huckleberry Trail, law officers were on the lookout for William Morva.

The search for Morva began after he was taken to the hospital to seek treatment for a sprained leg and wrist from a reported fall, Sheriff Tommy Whitt said Sunday. Procedure dictates that inmates are transported in handcuffs and leg irons to the hospital by a deputy sheriff assigned to the jail.

About 2:30 a.m. Sunday, Morva overpowered the officer, seized his pistol and shot Derrick McFarland, a hospital security guard, Davis said.

McFarland, a 33-year-old man living in Christiansburg, had tried to assist the deputy sheriff and prevent Morva's escape, police said.

Morva fled toward Hilltop Road, after shedding his orange jail-issued jumpsuit, police said.

McFarland died from his wounds. The deputy sheriff injured in Morva's escape was in stable condition at the hospital Sunday morning.
On Sunday, Blacksburg Police Officer Nathan O'Dell (right) points for Pulaski County K9 Officer Daniel Johnson (left) and his trained bloodhound "Jerry Lee" in an attempt to pick up the scent trail of an alleged shooting suspect at Meadow Brook Trailer Park near the Blacksburg / Montgomery County line Sunday morning. Police were searching for William Charles Morva.

Matt Gentry | The Roanoke Times

On Sunday, Blacksburg Police Officer Nathan O'Dell (right) points for Pulaski County K9 Officer Daniel Johnson (left) and his trained bloodhound "Jerry Lee" in an attempt to pick up the scent trail of an alleged shooting suspect at Meadow Brook Trailer Park near the Blacksburg / Montgomery County line Sunday morning. Police were searching for William Charles Morva.
Virginia State Police Tactical Team Officers meet in front of the emergency room entrance at Montgomery Regional Hospital Sunday morning.

Virginia State Police Tactical Team Officers meet in front of the emergency room entrance at Montgomery Regional Hospital Sunday morning.

"We really need to look into it real closely and find out how this happened," Whitt said about Morva's escape. "We have an idea, but it's just speculation at this point, and I'd rather not speculate."

Whitt said the deputy, whose name he would not disclose, was sedated and unable to speak with investigators.

Police officers from several neighboring areas aided in the search effort. Two Virginia State Police helicopters surveyed the area and police dogs went out with officers on foot. The outpouring of support from other agencies was "mind-boggling," Whitt said.

The search took place just as Virginia Tech students were moving in for the start of the school year. Thousands of students and their parents flooded the area this weekend. Classes begin today.

Rumors about Morva and the police hunt flew around Blacksburg Sunday night and this morning, with people saying that police were visiting various people who had known the suspect.

Morva was known as a transient who had a hard time holding a steady job before his 2005 arrest. He had attended Blacksburg High School.

He was a downtown coffeeshop regular known for going barefoot and wearing camouflage shorts and a T-shirt regardless of the weather. He portrayed himself as an outsider and sometimes spoke of living in the woods and hunting for food.

Christina Gardner, an employee of the Rivermill bar in downtown Blacksburg who knew Morva from high school, said Sunday that he is an idealist who had gotten into a desperate situation.

"I never thought he was capable of these kinds of actions," Gardner said.

"He has been homeless off and on for several years, because his family moved back to Richmond. And he hasn't had the easiest life, but he's always tried to do right by people."

At McFarland's Christiansburg home on Sunday afternoon, a skateboard and other toys leaned against a wall and the sound of young children and barking dogs met knocks at the door. Relatives, however, declined to talk to a reporter.

Morva was in jail on charges of trying to rob the Deli Mart on Glade Road in Blacksburg in August 2005. His trial had been continued twice this summer, and the new date was set for Wednesday, according to circuit court records.

Morva and Jeffrey Scott Roberts, 21, of Richmond were arrested Aug. 16, 2005, after an attempted armed robbery at the Deli Mart.

Police said two masked men — one carrying a shotgun, the other carrying a rifle — attempted to enter the store only to find that the door had been locked and the business closed for the evening.

A store clerk who saw the robbers called Blacksburg police and then chased the men. Morva and Roberts were arrested a short time later with help from the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office and the Virginia State Police. They recovered a .22-caliber rifle and a 12-gauge shotgun — both with rounds in the chambers — as well as clothing and ski masks the robbers had discarded.

In April, a Montgomery County grand jury indicted Morva in connection with the Deli Mart crime as well as two other attempted burglaries on July 14, 2005, and Aug. 12, 2005. Online court records do not specify where those alleged crimes occurred.
On Sunday, Virginia State Police Officer Dave Purcell gives his dog, Zeus, water after emerging from the woods in an attempt to pick up the scent of the alleged shooting suspect at Meadow Brook Trailer Park near the Blacksburg/Montgomery County line Sunday morning. Police were following a tip from a citizen who reported seeing an individual matching the suspect's description, but the search team was unable to find the scent and the effort was terminated.

On Sunday, Virginia State Police Officer Dave Purcell gives his dog, Zeus, water after emerging from the woods in an attempt to pick up the scent of the shooting suspect at Meadow Brook Trailer Park. Police were following a tip from a citizen who reported seeing an individual matching the suspect's description, but the search team was unable to find the scent and the effort was terminated.

Before Sunday, Morva had been charged with attempted robbery, use of a firearm during an attempted robbery, statutory burglary, two counts of attempted statutory burglary and three counts of conspiracy.

6 thoughts on “Of note to former Hokies…

  1. darkfyre_muse

    Wow
    I may have just been a naive freshmen but it seems 10 years has changed Alot. The change started when I was still there. And a execution style in ’97 I think, and and a bizarre rape/assault in 2001. But that didn’t feel like this.

    1. woofwoofarf Post author

      Re: Wow
      It’s a crazy thing – from the descriptions, this guy sounds like someone you’d see at Bollo’s (if it’s even still there) or bumming around in front of The Cellar (if that’s even still there). Also, I used to live right on Washington Street, a couple of blocks from where the deputy was killed. I can’t even imagine something like that going down in that neighborhood.

    2. woofwoofarf Post author

      Re: Wow
      OK, that was eerily prescient. From the update of the article above:
      UPDATED 1:37 p.m.
      Bollo’s, a downtown Blacksburg coffee shop that was frequented by William Morva before his arrest last year, has closed for the day amid managers’ concerns that the the business could become a target.
      In addition, as police close downtown roads and Virginia Tech canceled what was supposed to be the first day of classes, business came to an abrupt standstill after lunch. The usually busy intersection of College Avenue and Draper Road, located on the edge of Tech’s campus, is nearly deserted.
      Felicia Jackson, a barrista at Bollo’s, said “It’s not worth it for us to be here if nobody’s in here.”
      Discussions are going on about closing Bollo’s sister business, Gillie’s, located around the corner. Other downtown businesses appear to be remaining open.

        1. woofwoofarf Post author

          Re: Wow
          I’ll say! Though I heard a couple years back they’re actually serving meat (or at least fish) these days. I’m not a vegetarian, but it’s kind of disillusioning.
          Old running gag when I was in Blacksburg:
          I was at Gillies for brunch and I asked for a side of bacon. You should have seen the waitress – the hair on her legs stood on end!
          🙂

      1. Anonymous

        Re: Wow
        I wonder if this is the same William Morva mentioned on roanoke.com and Slice of Sci-Fi as being an actor in a 2005 “old-style sci-fi mystery” entitled “River of Dread”. The movie was filmed by former VA Tech alumnus Seneca Hayes’ — who owns Fried Squid Productions. [More on FSP at Hayes’ MySpace profile]. “River of Dread” was filmed entirely in digital media, screened around Richmond, VA — and was then reported to go straight to DVD. For some sickos, it could become a “cult” classic *if* this is the same guy.
        The link was first mentioned on The Sope-Bocks (http://sopebocks.blogspot.com).
        THANKS for the good work! Keep it up — and stay safe.

Comments are closed.