BRILEY BROTHERS: More victims’ kin say they oppose parole for Meekins
http://www.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/special_report/briley/>SPECIAL REPORT: Briley Brothers
More relatives of victims in a triple murder committed by one of the Briley brothers and accomplice Duncan Eric Meekins are opposing parole for Meekins.
Shurrane Webb, whose sister Judy Diane Barton was killed along with her boyfriend, Harvey W. Wilkerson, and their 5-year-old son in Richmond on Oct. 19, 1979, contacted the Virginia Parole Board this week. Webb said she is writing a letter to the board opposing Meekins' parole, which is under consideration.
"Who's to say he won't get out of here and do it again?" Webb said.
Webb, 44, of Greensboro, N.C., said she remembers watching from a police detective's car as black body bags were removed from Barton's house in Highland Park two days after the killings. Webb had just gotten home from church.
"Those are just memories, memories, memories," Webb said. "They will always haunt me."
The notorious Briley gang -- which included Meekins and brothers Linwood, James and Anthony Briley -- murdered at least 11 people in the Richmond area in 1979.
Meekins was 16 when he and the Brileys were arrested, the day after police discovered the bodies on Barton Avenue. The teenager quickly began cooperating with authorities and ultimately would become the prosecution's key witness.
In exchange for his testimony against the Brileys, prosecutors Robert J. Rice and Warren Von Schuch told Meekins they would speak on his behalf when he was up for parole. They say he testified truthfully and has behaved well in prison.
Rice, now a criminal defense attorney, and Von Schuch, still a Richmond-area prosecutor, met June 17 with Rudolph C. McCollum Jr., a former Richmond mayor who sits on the parole board. The two attorneys emphasize that Meekins' testimony enabled the capital-murder convictions of Linwood and James Briley and probably stopped the killing rampage.
Linwood and James Briley staged the nation's largest successful escape from death row in 1984, but they were captured after 19 days and later executed. Anthony Briley is serving a term of life plus 139 years.
Meekins, now 45, has served nearly 30 years in prison and is being held out of state under an assumed name for his protection. He has been denied parole six times since 1993.
Meekins was sentenced to life plus 100 years in prison for his role in two murders and two robberies and for fatally shooting Wilkerson. Authorities say Meekins killed another man, but they didn't prosecute that case.
Meekins and two of the Brileys raped Barton, who was pregnant, before James Briley shot her four times in the head, killing her. James Briley also shot and killed the couple's son, Harvey Wayne Barton.
Barton's mother, Shirley B. Archie, 72, said she had a nervous breakdown about three months after the murders. She recalls sitting in a courthouse hallway crying as she waited to testify at one of the hearings, when Meekins' mother approached her.
Meekins' mother told her Meekins was sorry and that the Brileys had made him take part in the slayings, Archie said.
Archie said she has prayed for Meekins and his family. "I don't think he should make parole, although he's somebody's child, too," Archie said.
Webb said, "If I don't forgive them, then God won't forgive me of my sins. But I will never, never, never forget."
Members of Meekins' family have declined requests to be interviewed.
Four of the parole board's five members must agree to free Meekins. They are expected to finish voting within the next few weeks.
Contact Reed Williams at (804) 649-6332 or
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Reader Reactions
me personally i think they should give him a chance yes he commeted a crime but he was 16 and young i did things when i was 16 i wouldnt do again and im 27 he had 30 yrs to think about his crime people can change. he went through alot of punisment that yall probly cant under stand he was 16 yrs old in prison do yo kno wat happen 2 people in prison i garentee you he is deeply sorry ...give him a chance he on porole eny mess up he is gone for life
Well if this guy Meekins is paroled this time around, with the help of Von Schuch’s testimony of what a great guy Meekins really is, there isn’t anything I could do. Except wait for Meekins’ book to be published—where he’s smiling ear-to-ear on the cover: “One Sweetheart of a Deal.“
I don’t care what he was promised, they can speak on his behalf all the want. He can say they made him do it all he wants, and he can be a model prisoner from now ‘til eternity. The fact that he was a witness and helped to bring the other killers to justice doesn’t mean squat, except that in that case he did the right thing. NONE OF THIS NEGATES THE FACT THAT HE KILLED SOMEONE IN COLD BLOOD AND HAS NO BUSINESS EVER LIVING AS A FREE MAN AGAIN…NO MATTER WHAT PROMISES WERE MADE TO HIM!!!
dsharp0294 if you’ve been following this at all then you’d know that Rice & Von Shuch don’t just want to testify on Meekins’ behalf—they want him released! everything matters, my friend.
So what - let them testify on his behalf. They should hold up there end of the deal AND the parole board should hold up the judges end and leave Mr. Meekins in there for the 100 years plus. It should not matter WHO testifies on his behalf - he has been denied 7 times since 1993 - so do you really think it is going to really matter!
Robo, The fact that an eager prosecutor promised Meekins one sweetheart of a deal, is that the one & only thing that matters here? If so, why? Is this only about Meekins & Von Schuch—Should it be? Why? There are other angles to this besides for Von Schuch’s ‘promise’ to Meekins:
Is 30 yrs enough time for those crimes? Should Meekins be someone’s next-door neighbor today? I for one find it incredibly selfish of Von Schuch to be concerned only with ‘his’ promise, ‘his’ word.
Despite the depravity of the crime,
if he is up for parole, and he was promised a deal, he should be released.
Robo
....i will be honest with you..i wouldn’t be surprised if they actually paroled him…i know that if they do, he needs to move as far away from va as possible because if it was my family members that were killed…...enuff said’
I agree as well. Just because he turned on them and cooperated with police, does not mean he should be able to get parole. He participated in the raping of a pregnant woman. That kind of hate cannot be cured by locking someone up in prison for 30 years. If he is SUCH a good person, why the need to maintain him in an out of state prison under an assumed name? Afraid another prisoner might find the fact that he is a rapist and child killer offensive and kill him?
He’s a cold blooded man who raped a pregant woman and participated in her’s and her sons murders. He should never see the light of day again and if the parole board is stupid enough to let him go, my only hope is that some kind citizen will take it upon themselves to carry out the death penalty he should have had years ago.
i agree with you badger….there are people that committ crimes and pay their debt to society,but how do you repay a person’s life? or in this case,multiple lives? nah…he needs to stay there for the rest of his life..he doesnt deserve to get out especially for the heinous crimes that were committed…if it becomes an ‘economic’ issue, as far as taking care of him and it being cost effective, just send him to afghanistan for the next 3 years..on the front line..with a bb gun….searching for ied’s…..if he can survive those 3 years then maybe, maybe, i would consider it..maybe..
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