Another twist for VCU
Chesterfield County Police
Willie B. Fuller
Published: January 31, 2009
Updated: May 6, 2009
Willie B. Fuller became Virginia Commonwealth University's police chief with a bachelor's degree of questionable quality.
For VCU, which has endured nearly a year of negative publicity for improperly awarding a degree to Richmond's former police chief, Fuller's arrest Wednesday on charges of using a computer to solicit sex from an underage girl is a setback in efforts to repair its reputation.
Fuller, 50, was released at 3 p.m. yesterday on $10,000 bond on the condition that he not use the Internet or send e-mails, said Chesterfield County Sheriff Dennis Proffitt.
A bachelor's degree was not a requirement for the VCU police chief job when Fuller was hired nearly nine years ago, and it still is not required. But the situation did play into the controversy that roiled the campus during the investigation into the degree awarded to Rodney Monroe while he was Richmond's police chief.
Fuller holds a bachelor's degree in police science from St. John's University in Springfield, La., according to St. John's director of permanent records. St. John's in Louisiana is not affiliated with the prestigious Catholic university with the same name in New York, or with St. John's College, which has campuses in Annapolis, Md., and Santa Fe, N.M.
Robert D. Holsworth, former dean of the College of Humanities and Sciences at VCU, said yesterday that he discovered St. John's University was not an officially accredited institution while researching the case of a VCU employee who did not have a legitimate undergraduate degree.
Holsworth, who retired as a political science professor in January, would not say whether that employee was Fuller.
However, he cited the case in a well-publicized e-mail last summer to the VCU auditor investigating the bachelor's degree that had been awarded improperly to Monroe, now police chief in Charlotte, N.C.
"In this instance, I personally made the unhappy discovery that the degree not only came from an unaccredited institution, but that the Web site of the institution was now a conduit to pornographic sites," he wrote June 26 to Richard O. Bunce, VCU's director of assurance services.
Holsworth made the discovery around 2006, the year VCU awarded an undergraduate degree to Fuller, who had attended VCU in the 1970s. When Holsworth discovered it, "I brought that to the attention of the appropriate individuals at VCU," he said.
Fuller was awarded a VCU bachelor of interdisciplinary studies degree, university spokeswoman Pam Lepley said. He also has a post-graduate certificate in public management from VCU, Lepley said. VCU officials did not say who approved Fuller's undergraduate degree.
The St. John's degree apparently raised no red flags until Fuller began work on a master's degree at VCU.
Citing federal and state student and personnel privacy provisions, Lepley said she could not release further information about his academic record.
However, she said graduate credits can be applied to undergraduate degrees. If graduate credits are applied to an undergraduate degree, the same credits cannot apply to a VCU master's or doctoral degree, although they can be applied toward a post-graduate certificate.
Pamela Winkler, director of permanent records for St. John's, said yesterday that Fuller earned a bachelor of science degree in police science in 1995. She said Fuller graduated with honors.
Winkler said the university is accredited with the Accrediting Commission International, whose Web site says it is a nonprofit corporation in Arkansas that primarily accredits religious and small, specialized schools.
"Due to the views of most of our schools concerning the separation of church and state, we have never applied to the U.S. Department of Education for any affiliation with the government," the site says.
Winkler said St. John's University has offered distance-learning degree programs since 1969. During the time when Fuller was enrolled, St. John's University had about 650 degree students, she said.
However, the university is not accredited in Louisiana, said Cheryl Michelet, director of communications for the state Board of Regents.
Nor is it accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, which covers Virginia and Louisiana. Tom E. Benberg, the commission's chief of staff, said the university is "totally unfamiliar to me."
Contact Karin Kapsidelis at (804) 649-6119 or
.
Contact Michael Martz at (804) 649-6964 or .
Staff writer Mark Bowes contributed to this report.
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Reader Reactions
I am sickened by what I am learning about the things going on there on Franklin Street in the heart of VCU. The Monroe thing and now this. Who is running things over there? Certainly no one who cares about students - those who work hard and those who could be vulnerable to a sicko like this guy. Who else over there needs to get the boot? Unfortunately I don’t think anybody cares - they just appear to be protecting one of their own. When is someone going to step in and clean up this mess before we have to read another embarrassing story in the the TD?
N. Campbell - I think everyone should be proud of a college degree wherever it comes from. VCU’s problems seem to be centered in Richmond, (Rodney Monroe, Philip Morris, Doug Wilder, and now this guy). I think the State needs to step in and remind VCU that VCU works for and is owned by, the Commonwealth of Virginia, not the City of Richmond. Doug Wilder is finally gone from office now, hopefully he will take his corruption with him, and VCU can concentrate on educating those that want to work for it. I think it is a crime that the Tax payers of Richmond bought Monroe his phony degree from VCU and paid for his on-line credits from the University of Phoenix. The good news is that Monroe took his sorry lying self out of here, and Wilder is no longer the King he thought he was. For those that enroll in Wilder’s VCU class, good luck, if you intend on staying in Richmond for the remainder of your working career, it may help you. Please remember to thank all of the tax payers of Virginia for paying that bum $150,000 to teach his class.
To Kant Seay:
I earned a BIS degree from VCU - it CAN be a very legitimate degree.
For example - I was working at the University and used their tuition waiver process to earn my degree. (Two free classes per semester - it took 17 yrs, but I did it, eventually - read on:)
In my Senior year, my degree program (Substance Abuse Counseling) was abolished on the undergraduate level. So I added Business courses and Psychology courses and made it a BIS in Employee Assistance.
The program isn’t just B.S. - a student must petition a committee for the degree, citing at least two different areas to make up the bulk of the concentration. A course of study is carefully (or SHOULD be) designed for the student to follow.
I’m very proud of earning my degree, but I can’t say I’m so proud anymore of saying I earned it from VCU. After all, we’re seeing so many abuses of the program now.
To Lloyd and NCSteve,
First off, Mr. Hope was charged with forcible sodomy of a 13 year old girl. Mr. Fuller was charged with soliciting a 14 year old girl. The link that NC Steve provided was to the nbc12.com webpage and not the TD site. The reason that there is not link at the TD is because the TD did not post Mr. Hope’s picture as they did Mr. Fuller’s
I think that there should not be partisan news reporting at the TD. Why not have equal coverage of both events? I personally beleive that Mr. Hope’s charge was more severe and his experience and agency FAR outweigh those of a college campus police chief.
I would LOVE to know why the TD has “exposed” the tainted credentials of Mr. Fuller, when the same “in-depth” reporting could not be done with Mr. Hope. I would challenge ANYONE to find out where Mr. Hope received his education within the confines of the TD website.
Be fair. If you want people to stop complaining about certain aspects of society, then start right here and admit that something is not the same with this coverage.
NCsteve, I believe the reason there has not been as much reader reaction to Mr. Hope’s issue is because they have not provided an age for the victim which would lead most to believe that the victim is probably not a minor. I greatly doubt it has anything to do with his skin color.
I sure would like to know why I can’t see Capt. Hope’s booking picture, but I have seen 3 days worth of pictures of Willie Fuller? One was a Chief of a COLLEGE police dept., the other is a 30 year Captain of the VIRGINIA STATE POLICE!
One was accused of SOLICITING, the other FORCIBLY SODOMIZED a young girl, yet one we haven’t heard about in 4 days, the other I have heard about and SEEN every day since it happened.
I get the impression that no one really wants to look at the patterns of deception by VCU officials. Real estate questions, secret deals with Philip Morris, degree flaps- the public is just supposed to except all these issues as random, isolated incidents. Its time for Richmond and Virginia leaders to recognize that the VCU administration is out of control and needs to be brought to heel. Their irresponsible, arrogant actions are not just hurting surrounding neighborhoods, students and faculty, but the whole City, Commonwealth, and higher education in general.
Thinking of degrees I feel that many Pastors have degrees that have not been earned as well. So many Pastors have Dr. Rev. or Dr. Bishop in before their names as well. If we as a society will look at the Law Enforcement community look at it all the Business community , Religious community as well. Be real stop trying to more than you are.
I could not find a web site or a physical address for St. John’s University in La. Is this one of those mail order degree colleges?
A college degree should not be a requirement to be a police chief. What are the most important requirements are years of experience by means working in field for a number of years learning the profession by hands on experience & working your way up the ladder, respect, integrity, honesty, good communications skills, life experience, and completing many specialized training schools. There are some police chiefs serving localities and educational institutions that don’t have a BA or Associates Degrees but possess many years of experience in law enforcement along with training, integrity and honesty that has gained the respect from the people the serve with and others because they knew what it was like to be at the bottom. Bill Corvello and Jerry Massengill did not have BA degrees when they ran Va State Police and they were excellent police chiefs because of their integrity and years of hard work and experience. There are police chiefs that have college degrees but lack experiences listed above which has caused lots of problems in police agencies. Fuller may have a degree, but he has shown he has lacks the areas listed above. If VCU had an experienced cop running their PD major cases like the missing female that turned up murdered would have been solved better by them and not by Richmond PD taking the lead and slving the case. I hope that his incident will not reflect negatively upon VCU campus police officers because I have met some and they are professional along with some kindest, helpful, and well trained group of offers in a college police environment.
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