
1995 murder conviction of SEAL trainee overturned
By Will Jones
August 5, 2009
The Virginia Court
of Appeals yesterday overturned the
first-degree murder conviction of a former Navy SEAL trainee in the
1995 slaying of college student Jennifer Lea Evans in Virginia Beach.
In granting an appeal of Dustin Allen Turner, a divided three-judge
panel vacated his convictions of murder and abduction with intent to
defile and found him guilty only of being an accessory after the fact
-- a misdemeanor. The judges remanded the case to the Virginia Beach
Circuit Court with instructions to modify the conviction order
accordingly.
Turner and fellow SEAL trainee Billy Joe Brown were sentenced to 82 and
72 years respectively in the June 19, 1995, slaying of Evans in a
parked car outside a Virginia Beach nightclub.
Brown now says he alone murdered Evans, a 21-year-old student at Emory
University. Last summer, Judge Frederick B. Lowe of Virginia Beach
Circuit Court told the Appeals Court that he found Brown's new account
credible. |

Dustin Turner, 2008
prison interview
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In reviewing Turner's petition for a writ of actual innocence, the
Appeals Court said that based on the Circuit Court's findings and the
nonconflicting evidence from Turner's trial, "we conclude no rational
trier of fact could have found Turner guilty of murder or abduction
with intent to defile.
"While Turner's conduct creates a suspicion of guilt, the evidence,
viewed in the context of Brown's recantation, cannot support findings
of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt," the judges wrote.
Linda Summitt, Turner's mother, said yesterday that she had spoken to
her son, who is being held at the Powhatan Correctional Center, and
described him as happy but cautious about his prospect of freedom.
"It's been a long time in coming," she said. "I'm taking it more as the
end of the road. After 14 years we've adjusted to a lot of things, but
I've always known he was going to come home."
Summitt, who lives in Indiana, added, "I think God's smiling down on us
right now. . . . I'm just thankful Billy Brown found the strength to
recant."
Evans' parents, Delores and Al Evans of Atlanta, could not be reached.
A spokesman for Virginia Attorney General Bill Mims was not ready to
say whether the case would be appealed, either to the full Court of
Appeals or to the Virginia Supreme Court. "We are reviewing the court's
opinion," spokesman David Clementson said.
Turner and Evans met at a Virginia Beach nightclub and left together
early the morning of June 19, 1995. Brown, who had been drinking
heavily at the same club, joined them in the car and got into the back
seat.
A witness testified that Turner told him -- as Turner and Evans left
the bar -- that they, along with Brown, "were going to have a
threesome." Another witness said Brown initially planned to leave with
her and not Turner that night.
Under questioning nine days after the slaying, Turner led authorities
to where the men left Evans' body in dense woods just off Interstate 64
in Newport News. Turner said Brown killed Evans, Brown said Turner did,
and both men were convicted in 1996.
After entering prison and finding religion, Brown said he alone killed
Evans by reaching over the front passenger seat and choking her.
Yesterday's opinion included a dissent from Judge Cleo E. Powell, who
said the key question was not whether Brown had acted alone in the
murder but whether Turner had abducted Evans with the intent to defile
her.
"If he did, the fact that Brown may have acted alone in committing the
murder does not absolve Turner of his guilt," Powell wrote.
The judge said the record provides evidence to conclude "that Turner
deceived Evans into going to his car with the true intent of both he
and Brown having a 'threesome' with Evans against her will."
Turner is the first person in Virginia to have a murder conviction
overturned under a 2004 law that allows non-DNA evidence of innocence
to be considered more than 21 days after sentencing.
If the decision stands, David B. Hargett, Turner's lawyer, said his
client would be set free because he would receive credit for time
served if his convictions are reduced to being an accessory after the
fact -- a Class 1 misdemeanor punishable by no more than 12 months in
jail.
"We're very optimistic that this decision will be the decision from the
courts, but there's no guarantee," Hargett said.
Contact Will Jones at (804) 649-6911 or wjones@timesdispatch.com .
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