Posted on 10/11/2005 11:58:11 AM PDT by smartin
The family of VCU freshman Taylor Behl has scheduled her funeral, now that her remains have been released from the medical examiner.
Viewing will be Thursday from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. at Money and King Vienna Funeral Home in Vienna. Services will be Friday at 11:00 a.m. at The Church of the Holy Comforter in Vienna.
The 17-year-old's remains were discovered in a shallow gave in rural Mathews County last Wednesday. Police say they were led to the location after examining a photograph found on Ben Fawley's Web site.
Fawley, 38, of Richmond, was charged Monday with possession of a firearm while a convicted felon. Police said the charge stems from the department's continued focused and aggressive investigation into Behl's murder.
Fawley's attorney has said his client and Behl had a sexual relationship and that Fawley saw her about an hour before she disappeared from her campus dorm on September 5.
Not long after Behl's disappearance, police searched his apartment and seized computers, discs and cameras.
WRIC-TV in Richmond is reporting that sources tell them Fawley's credit card was used to buy gas in New Kent County around the time Behl disappeared. New Kent County lies between Richmond and Mathews County, where Behl's remains were found.
I hear your points, but I think changing the legal age of adulthood would cause the law to treat 18, 19, and 20-year-olds as minors and there would be more control. If they can't drink until then, then they might not be ready for voting, serving in the military, or signing contracts.
Good luck finding a college that lifts a finger to prevent 18-20 year olds from drinking, even though it's currently illegal.
I think these two things are critical. In the case I described, I'm sure these were the concerns of the college. If "privacy rights" trump every other concern (even concern over whether a student lives or dies), then the indifference of the colleges to the welfare of their students makes sense. But it's curious that for so many years (til the '60s, in fact), nobody would have imagined young adults living off their parents had such rights.
I don't have that worry, but believe parents should teach their children not to drink before they are of legal age.
If they need someone with enough guts to execute this moron, call me. Sharpening the needle!
ooh, I like how you think.
If the school is small, someone will notice that the student is gone.
So true. Even 25-30 years ago many colleges had gender-segegated dorms with visitation rules and curfews. From what I hear now, many roommates are fornicating in plain view of whoever else is in the room.
Inconsiderate as that is, Taylor Behl would be a lot better off if she'd chosen that route. Apart from heavy drug and alcohol use, there's little students can do on campus that will get them killed. Even heavy drug and alcohol use is safer on campus, where potentially fatal overdoses are more likely to be noticed and reported before it's too late. But the absolute lack of control over students' off campus wanderings is worrisome. So many students routinely don't come back to their dorms at night, or attend class regularly, that often nobody sees any reason to report them missing for several days.
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