STAR/TRIBUNE
A cop lay dying at the hands of Tim Eling. The former Marine had botched yet another pharmacy robbery, escaping after a gunfight with police officer Richard Walton. Now, bleeding from a gunshot to the leg, Eling lay holed up at a relative's house in St. Paul, drifting in and out from a heavy dose of painkillers.
His brother-in-law walked in and dropped the morning newspaper. "The guy's dead,'' he said in disgust. He left Eling to read about the trail of grief he had blazed at Mounds Park Hospital in St. Paul the night before.
Today, 29 years later, Eling still walks the corridors at the Stillwater prison. A former drug addict and a first-degree murderer, he learned last week that his life sentence has been brought to an end with an extraordinary parole decision by state Corrections Commissioner Tom Roy. Corrections officials say they cannot recall the last time a first-degree murderer of a police officer was granted a parole.
Roy's decision has triggered an emotional debate over justice and forgiveness that has quickly spread to the State Capitol. On Friday, the Legislature's top Republicans, Sen. Amy Koch and Rep. Kurt Zellers, sent a letter to Gov. Mark Dayton protesting the parole and calling for legislative hearings.
The state's largest organization of police officers not only opposes parole for Eling, it says that cop killers deserve capital punishment. "I don't think anyone who kills an officer should ever get out alive,'' said Dennis Flaherty, executive director of the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association. "Where do you draw the line, what kind of world would you be creating?''
Roy and his deputies understand the reaction, but say they believe their decision speaks to the ability of some violent criminals to transform themselves. They say Eling's conduct over the past 15 years suggests he will lead a life of service on the outside. They also note that, across several previous Corrections administrations, he had to repeatedly prove he was making changes in his life.
Eling, now 62, says he knows the gravity of the decision. Despite the parole, he must still complete four more years of a companion 1996 sentence for smuggling drugs while in prison. At the same time he'll try to outlast a cancer that doctors discovered several years ago.
In the course of a two-hour interview last week, Eling said he understands the disgust felt by police. "I'd probably feel the same way," he said. "The record speaks for itself. I have not been a good person in this life."
MaryAnn Walton, 74, the officer's former wife, said last week that she accepts the judgment of state parole officials. But she added: "I believe in transformations of heart and that people can be forgiven by God. What bothers me is I know how hard this will be on police officers. What kind of example is it going to be to have a cop killer turned loose?''
Several days before his September parole hearing, he said, Commissioner Roy spoke with him privately for an hour.
Life in prison didn't mean staying clean. Eling found himself part of a smuggling operation involving cocaine and marijuana. His urine screens kept coming back dirty and by the mid-1990s authorities went to his daughter's home to search for a possible connection. The warden at Oak Park Heights told him during a parole review: If you're trying to make sure you never get out, you're doing a good job of it, Eling recalled.
"The warden said, 'You need to find a reason to get up in the morning. Why don't you go back to school?' Out of nowhere this thought came to my head, 'You know, I'm done with it' and I've never been high since then."
Eling became a founding member of Stillwater's Restorative Justice Program, which brings crime victims in to speak to offenders about the pain they've caused. He took up painting, and today teaches a daily art class to 22 offenders. During Mass in the prison chapel, he gives the first reading.
"You have to ask yourself, 'How do I make amends for this?' '' Eling said. "If you stole something from somebody you can pay them back. If you broke something, it can be fixed. But how do you make amends for taking somebody's life?"
If he beats the cancer long enough to get out, Eling said he hopes to travel to Grand Marais and live along the North Shore, performing volunteer work and painting.
Yet he has a recurring dream in which he is stopped for a driving violation. The officer runs a license check that comes back with the murder conviction that pops up on the computer screen.
"Some things you just don't get past,'' he said. "If you go by just the record, holy mackerel, look at this guy here. He doesn't deserve anything. It doesn't show anything else.''
Sunday, October 30, 2011
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If you kill a cop you should not be let out of jail. Because you killed someone and you have to pay the consaqenses for killing a man.
ReplyDeleteCam K. 1
Killing a cop or any type of murder should have a lifetime consequence. I think staying in jail or prison for a lifetime is the right thing to do, if you have committed this kind of crime. There's no reason to ruin someones life and then you only have to serve a part of your life for what wrong actions you've made? That person isn't ever able to get his life back and that isn't right. The law passed after this case was a good law to pass. Something needed to be done about it.]
ReplyDeleteLiana H.3
Any person who murders someone should have to pay for it. Sometimes you do have to feel some remorse for these people who have spent most of their lives behind bars. Yet, think again and realize that they had absolutely no remorse for the innocent life they were taking. The murderer in this case seems to have realized to the extent of what he did. Even so, he doesn't deserve to be set free. As they said in the article; "cop killers deserve capital punishment", they should follow through with that statement. Obviously the man hasn't learned after reading that he smuggled marijuana and cocaine. He has figured out how to put on a good face though; saying that he will volunteer and paint. Some people can never learn.
ReplyDeletePaige F. 7
I think it doesn't matter he killed a police officer, he killed a person. Anyone who knowingly and intentionly killed someone deserves to rot in jail. If someone kills someone on accident, it is a different story with different consequences. He killed someone, that is the point. The dead person will never be able to finish their life, niether should he. He should sit in jail and never leave until he is in a bodybag. This is why so many people die, they let dirtbags like this guy into public to kill again. Our justice system is too soft and broken. If it is obvious that someone commtied a murder, they should be in jail for the rest of their life.
ReplyDeleteSid m. 7
He killed a human being. A police officer! There is no way he should be set free after killing someone. Once you do an action like this it is a serious crime, and you can't just say "oh its okay, just don't do it again!" There is consequences, and his should be to sit in jail until he dies, just as Sid was saying.
ReplyDeleteSavannah T. 7
I think for killing anyone- a police officer, a factory worker, even a homeless person, anyone- the person responsible for the murder should be punished. The killer should definately be in jail for the rest of their life. The person killed can't live the rest of their life, and so I think it's only fair that the killer should have to waste the rest of their life in jail.
ReplyDeleteShannel D. 3
I personally think that if the law at the time gave him a punishment, just because they changed the law they cant change his punishment. so yes I think they should set him free but keep an eye on him.
ReplyDeleteMeagan L.7
This artical makes you think, should a killer get away? I don't think so. He killed a cop and he is supposed to serve a life sentence for it, not get out of prision so he can "start over". If you look at other prisioners who have been released, they went right back to what they were doing after a while of being out of prision. The way I would handle this is make the law that was passed the year after this happened, apply to every one. Not just the people who commited this crime after the law was passed.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with Sabrina. He committed a serious crime and he should face the consequences. That person will never get their life back. So him staying in jail for a life time is fair enough. Even if the law was passed later then the crime. It goes for everyone.
ReplyDeleteAnita R.3
I agree with Paige and Shannel. It doesn't matter who you murdered, you still killed a human being. He should have to deal with the consequences of his crime, just like everyone else, they should go through the same actions as someone who didn't kill a cop.
ReplyDeleteCheyenne. P. 7
I think it was wrong of Eling to kill the cop. I also think it would be wrong of him to have killed somebody who wasn't a cop. I think that because the law was changed after he was convicted, he should be released. I also think that if they would let out a different murderer who did the same thing as Eling, but the guy that the other person killed wasn't a cop then why shouldn't Eling be released.
ReplyDeleteCortney S. 1st
I agree with Paige. If you kill somebody you should be punished for that. Though I think that you shouldn't be arrested longer for killing a cop than for killing a normal person than you an me. Because all people are equal i think it wouldn't be right to arrest somebody longer for killing a cop. Though I think he should stay in jail for at least 16 years. But I believe, that some people can change. Especially if they see every day, how bad it was, what they did. They should really regret it. If they do that I think they can come free without commiting another crime. Because they know how bad it would end.
ReplyDeleteIsabel S. 7
My honest opinion is if you killed someone especially a cop you should get capital punishment, but being the law was passed after his conviction and are judicial system is messed up like this that he should be let out and he probably wont live very long anyways.
ReplyDeleteEthan A. 3rd
If you take somebody's life you should be put in prison for the rest of your life, especially if its a police officer that protects civilians. He shouldn't be let out because he would think that it was ok to do something so wrong, and other people would see it like that to.
ReplyDeleteMicaela C. 7th
i think its wrong to kill anyone in general, not just a cop. this person should not be let out, he should be in for life for taking someone elses life. he shouldnt be let out because then he may just do it again, or commit another offense.
ReplyDeleteMegan W. 7th
A cop has one job, to keep our country safe. He definetly doesn't deserve to be killed by some idiot guy. I think if someone can kill a police officer, he doesn't deserve to live, and surely not be let back into the real world. It's horrible that they're even considering letting him back out. "Good behavior" doesn't bring back the cop he killed.
ReplyDeleteKyle S. 1
People who kill cops or people in general shouldn't be set free from jail. You committed a serious crime and you deserved to get punished. Getting out and trying to do a good deed to make up for what you did is not going to bring back another human being back.
ReplyDeleteDanielle F.3
I agree with what MaryAnn Walton had to say about transformation of the heart but sometimes it's too late. I believe that any person who has committed a murder, no matter who the victim, should have to suffer a life sentence. Even if they have reason to believe that Eling is going to "lead a life of service" if he is let out, that does not make what he did okay and he should still have to suffer the consequences of the rest of his life. Also, if he is let out it may lead others to think that they can get away with murder and not have to suffer a life sentence either. Murder is not okay in any case and everyone who commits this crime should be jailed for life. But to take the life of a man who is trying to protect the people from stuff exactly like this? Letting Eling out of prison should not even be considered.
ReplyDeleteTyler H. p3
I agree with what just about everyone else is saying. Eling should not be released, the main reason is that he killed a police officer who was trying to do his job of protecting others, also while in prison he was caught smuggling drugs.yes he might now be sorry for what he did but he still should have to pay for his crime and do the time. He is just lucky that he was not put to death himself for killing another human being. If he is released what kind of message is that, sending out to other killers, that after a few years you will get to go free no mater who you kill. Murder is murder let him stay in jail where he belongs.
ReplyDeleteHaley Richter
I agree with the article but people change as the guy in the article did. it doesnt change what he did but he is trying to turn his life around. And anyone who was in jail that long and appears to have turned there life around they should be able to have a second chance.
ReplyDeleteErick L. 7
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