Friday, October 22, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Friday1 October 22, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Darrell's death: T I 0 (Continued from Page 1) 24, a former inmate at the county jail, were both well known to local law enforcement officials. On one arrest record, a. state po- lice trooper wrote "thief" in the space provided for Jimmy's oc- cupation. - The Loomises moved to their present home in 1961, hoping the change in neighborhood would be good for the family. But Dar- rell didn't do well at his new school, and soon began skipping classes. This brought his first contact with the law, and from there on, things only got -worse. "You name it, he did it," says a social worker who knew Dar- rell then. "Malicious destruction f property, breaking andhenter- them all." At first society's approach to Darrell's delinquency was reme- dial, not punitive, but as Dar- rell failed to respond to the treatment he received in t h e child guidance clinics and then the juvenile homes, the juvenile court began taking a tougher approach. After going through the Huron 4The Centic WITH EATS YOU MA Valley Child Guidance Clinic, and several juvenile, detention centers, including the Boys' Re- public at Farmington, Darrell was finally committed in 1968 to the W.J. Maxey Boys' Train- ing School, a sprawling deten- tion camp housing some 600 young offenders. Soon afterwards, his conduct caused him to be transferred across the street to BTS's max- imum security Greenoaks Cent- er. where he spent three years. For -the first part of his stay at Greenoakg, Darrell did very poorly. There was, BTS officials say, "one incident after anoth- er." He ran away from Green- oaks, only to be recaptured and returned there by the police ; he stole and he generally raised hell. Last November, however, coun- selors began noticing a n e w attitude in Darrell. For the first time he began to exhibit a sense of responsibility for his behav- ior and he worked closely with a" resident social worker, Swee Huang. By April, school offic- ials had come to the conclusion that "there was nothing else we ~ - NO , could do for him" and ordered Darrell released. "The prognosis over the long term was not all that good, but keeping him locked up was doing no good," explains one Green- oaks official. Greenoaks did not release Dar- rell into the world completely alone. He was. put in the care of a county social services de- partment aftercare worker James Blodgett. Blodgett recalls Darrell was "trying to lead a straight life, at least initially," following his discharge from Greenoaks. To begin with, Darrell tried to find work with his hands. An artist and woodworker at ragic It was, however, while await- ing transportation to court for arraignment on this charge that Darrell made a mistake t h a t landed him in jail for the next 45 days. With his typical brav- ado, Darrell escaped, slipping out of the handcuffs that secur- ed him to a chain in the state police post. He was free only hours before he was arrested once more and charged with escaping f r o m police custody. The police made this one stick, and Darrell didn't come out of what State Police Staff Sgt. Fay Johnson c a 11 s "Harvey's' Hotel" until Sept. 7. But Darrell was not to be free for long when he left the County end of a boy gone bad "As far as we are concerned, there is no such thing as a warning shot. It's impossible to know where the bullet might come down." re BookshopJ and DRINKS Y MARRY Greenoaks, Darrell attempted to join the carpenters union but was turned down. Blodgett ex- plains, "The positions are limit- ed, and the competition great," Looking back, Blodgett feels that the difficulty in finding work-beyond a few odd jobs at area car washes and gas sta- tions - sapped whatever resolve Darrell might have had. Another diversion from Dar- rell's self-proclaimed intention of going straight was automo- biles. Although Darrell never took a driver's examination or possessed a license, he n e v e r let that deter him from driving cars - including those which didn't belong to him. Darrell was issued nine tick- ets for moving violations b e - tween April 21, 1971, six days after his release from G r e e n- oaks, and July 8. Darrell's record went b e y o n d driving offenses however. On June 27, he was arrested by the State Police on a charge of con- tributing to the delinquency of a minor, a charge later dismissed by the prosecutor. On July 25 Darrell was again arrested, this time on a charge of larceny from a building. This charge also was dismissed. Jail that day. Upon his return home he found his '67 Ford Mus- tang convertible missing. He went to the state police p o s t to file a report, and was prompt- ly arrested for non-appearance in court on the nine traffic tickets. "He had been meaning to take care of\ those tickets when he got out of jail," says his moth- er Doris, "but as soon as he gets out they lock him up again for failure to appear in court. How could he appear in court if he was in jail? They knew where he was." So Darrell sat out the remain- der of the month in jail. He was finally released on Monday, Oct. 4. In the clear again, Darrell in- tended to "take things easy for a while," according to his moth- er. He spent Monday and Tues- day visiting his old friends, see- ing Sandy Mullins, his girl friend, and buying some n e w clothes - green cotton bell bot- toms and a metallic green shirt. Darrell spent the early part of Wednesday, Oct. 7. at home, playing with his sister's two small children - "he loved the kids," says Janice. In the late afternoon he visited Sandy at the house where she was baby- sitting on Michigan Ave. in Yp- silanti. That evening, Darrell visited with a close friend- f o r m e r fellow inmate at the Boys' Training School Jerry Salisbury - and his sister Jackie Wald- ron. At 11:45 p.m., Salisbury and his sister, drove Darrell home, they say. It may not have been that late-Sandy says she talked to Darrell on the phone at about 10, after he got home, and his mother says she saw Darrell before she went to bed at about 11:30. The last few hours in Dar- rell's life become a puzzle. At some time he left the house, either to steal the car, or to meet his friend who had. The police feel the car was stolen at approximately midnight. It was also at midnight that Trooper Duane Wolak and his partner, Trooper Barry Beck, swung their blue Plymouth cruiser out ofithe parking lot of the state police post on Michi- gan Ave. Trooper Beck was at the wheel, Wolak was radio opera- tor, It was Wolak's last spell on the midnight shift for a while, and there was a long weekend holiday and a return to day-shift coming up for him; perhaps some more time to spend with his wife and three children. A veteran of the state police since Nov. 1963, Wolak joined the force after completing a tour of duty with the Air Force. He was transferred to the Ypsi- lanti Post in August. At about 1:35 a.m., the two troopers were on patrol near Val's Market, the scene of fre- quent armed robberies, when they observed a darkened car moving across the recently com- pleted unopened Harris Rd. ov- erpass. They gave chase, turning on their red toplight. The car took off, the police in pursuit, and fled east on Ecorse Rd. to the U.S. 12 by-pass. Darrell was heading for home and the roads he knew well. The troopers kept right after the H4YDRoIATC- Daily-Cathy Gutheil DARRELL LOOMIS was shot near the Hydramatic plant on Ecorse Rd. in Ypsilanti. With the police in pursuit. Darrell sped the wrong-way on the U.S. 12-Ecorse Rd. by-pass. He then made a sharp left turn down a gravel road into the Hydramatic property. Driving into a woods, (1), he and his friend abandoned the stolen car. Darrell ran to (2) where he was shot. His companion ran into the woods at (3) and disappeared. The Loomis home is located at (4), down the street from (5) the home of the neighbor whose car was stolen. car. In their report, the troop- ers said.their speedometer reg- istered over 120 mph during the chase, as they raced to Michigan Ave. There Darrell made an- other U-turn about a mile into Wayne Co. before heading back towards Ypsilanti, on the wrong side of the road. In an effort to shake off his pursuers, who had radioed for help and had every available police unit for miles rushing to their aid, Darrell sped into the Hydramatic Plant parking lot, U-turned yet again, and headed out, west on Ecorse Rd. At the western end of the Hy- dramatic property, Darrell made a sharp left turn and headed down a gravel road. The road was barricaded by a chain link fence-the stolen car went through the fence, followed by the police cruiser, into a wooded area of the plant on the South side of Ecorse Rd. Darrell and his companion jumped from their car, as did the police, and headed into the woods. Wolak followed Darrell to the east, where he says he twice warned him to stop; and fired one shot from his service :A Julia Child MASTERING THE ART OF FRENCH COOKING 2 volumes-Knopf Books Grub first then ethics. -BRECHT Alex Lichine ENCYCLOPEDIA OF WINES AND SPIRITS A Knopf Book He who wants to eat cannot sleep. 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He points out that trooper Wolak did not even know Darrell Loo- mis. A request for an interview with trooper Wolak and his partner was denied. "He was a good kid, always polite and courteous. He just sat. in the corner and he was very respectful, but if I'd seen him steal my car and I'd had my gun. I would sure as, hell have shot him," says one, man who knew Darrell well. Doris and Everett Loomis find it hard to dispel their fears § § § Flair trousers just right for the casual effect without § § exaggeration. Corbin riding pockets, wider waistband § § § § § and belt loops. § § § §§ §§ § § § Flair § § § § §§ § § §§ Double knits and worsteds. From $23 to $40. §§ that the "police had .it in for Darrell." Everett is stunned by the killing for yet another reason. "I'd always thought they were meant. to fire a warning shot first," he says. "They had no right to shoot to kill," State Police Director Col. John R. Plants disagrees. "As far as we are concerned there is no such thing as a warning shot," he says. State Police Det. Sgt. Kenneth Ruonavaara says: "Its impossible to know where the bullet might come down" if a warning shot is fired. It was "unfortunate," the ,State Police say, it was "unlucky" that Dar- rell was killed. Normally, the State Police like to shoot to only wound, they- say. "Trooper Wolak acted within the rules and regulations of this department," insists Staff Sgt. Johnson. "I have completed my investigation and I am satis- fied with his conduct that night," Sgt. Johnson adds. The County Prosecutor also has completed his investigation, and he is satisfied too, - Although state law entitles officers to shoot and kill felons fleeing from the scene of a crime-no matter what their age -there will be many in Washtenaw Co. who will be dis- satisfied with the official ver- dict. They will not have the support of the law in the strug- gle for their version of justice. And so the matter rests. 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