Lee Jones

Allegations surface in North Carolina

Repeatedly confronted by his mother, 12-year-old Michael Roop finally admitted that a family friend had raped him on a recent trip to Myrtle Beach in South Carolina.

Michael's confession wasn't a surprise. For weeks after his return home his mother had been telling him that "he had to tell the truth and that "he needed counseling because of "what happened to him at the hands of the friend, Lee Jones."

She was suspicious, she'd later tell police, not because a grown man wanted to take a 12-year-old to the beach alone nor because Michael acted any differently after returning, but because of rumors she'd heard that Mr. Jones had "messed with other boys" in a tiny, isolated town in West Virginia called Gauley Bridge. Mr. Jones lived there and up until a few months before the beach trip, so did Michael.

According to Michael, the questions from his mother started the minute he returned home and didn't stop until he confessed that Mr. Jones had fondled him and forced him to have oral sex in their hotel room.

And while Michael's mother seemed anxious to know if anything had happened to Michael, it's difficult to piece together how long she waited before telling anyone. The trip was in late June, but social services in North Carolina didn't launch an investigation until the middle of October, after receiving a report from a counselor at Michael's school (Mrs. Roop later told a state social worker she'd reported the allegation to his counselor a few weeks before). A social worker interviewed Michael and his mother and as required by law, reported the allegation to the police.

From there, the case was assigned to Len Sloan, a detective in Myrtle Beach who said at trial that he had no experience investigating sex crimes or child abuse claims. His case notes show he had trouble pinning down details in Michael's story and he never interviewed Michael because his department wouldn't pay his travel expenses.

But still, when a prosecutor in Myrtle Beach expressed doubt about Michael's claims and whether they had enough evidence, Mr. Sloan assured him that other people found the boy to be credible (the social worker, for example, told Mr. Sloan he believe Michael's claims). He then pressed for a court order to bring Mr. Jones back to Myrtle Beach to face charges.

Meanwhile, in Gauley Bridge, the West Virginia State Police were busy building a case of their own. Within days of learning of Michael's accusation, they located nearly a half-dozen other witnesses-mostly young men--also claiming that Mr. Jones had raped them. By the time he was arrested in early February, 1998, police had located just under a dozen accusers with claims of sexual abuse spanning nearly fifteen years.

The scandal rocked Gauley Bridge, dividing friends and neighbors. The story gained statewide coverage and after Mr. Jones' eventual conviction, wire stories about the case were picked up by the New York Times and the Washington Post. And while the media put the high-profile case under an intense light, there are few indications that reporters ever questioned the weight of the evidence that was mounting against Mr. Jones.

Many Gauley Bridge residents did question the evidence, however. Mr. Jones was a well known figure in town, but not just because he was only one of about 750 living there, but because he was also their chief of police.

3 Comments

Justin,
Bless you for your wonderful investigative article. I have lived this with my friends, the Phillips Family for the more-than the last 10 years. I pray daily that Donna will get her husband back home. Lee is good but he couldn't be in two places at once. He was accused of molesting one boy, when he was actually helping me set up for my wedding reception and then at my wedding and reception. I tried to tell the officials this at the time, but they refused to listen. Also, Michael McCallister is violet felon, currently incarcerated in North Carolina. In 1989, his family asked that Lee drive him to a teenage facility in Charleston and when Lee stopped to get gas at Go Mart, it is alleged that Michael took some Lee's credit cards from his wallet and later used them. I don't know that Lee ever got them back. I pray for justice to be served for Lee. I know that Lee and Donna can't get the last ten years of their life back, but with Lee's release, they can have a future. When we watched Lee, being drug off to prison, I wondered how this could happen to this sweet INNOCENT man, but justice was not served in Fayette County on that day and has not be subsequently in the Lee Edward Jones case. I don't know how you heard of the case, but your investigation is a Blessing from Heaven. Did you know that Lee was holding a questionable death case open and it allegedly was closed the day Lee was convicted and a non-family member holding a life insurance policy on the deceased was able to collect, as he did in several other deaths in and near Fayette County?
Thank you for your wonderful investigative article!
Maureen Layton Clemons

Judy Ann Valentine

Maureen,
That questionable death wouldn't have been a truck driver would it? Just curious.

My 3 younger brothers and I grew up with all these so called victims. We also grew up with Lee as a friend and neighbor. I know, with out a doubt, that Lee Jones did not commit these crimes. The so called "victims" in this case were all troubled youth. Many of them, and their families, were helped out by Lee Jones. Lee would give you the shirt off his back then buy a new one to give to someone else.

I hope and pray that one day soon that Lee will be reunited with his family and friends.

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This chapter was published on December 4, 2007
SNAP SHOT
A single allegation in North Carolina against a decorated West Virginia police chief eventually ballooned into over 50 counts of sex crimes against children.

You're reading "Allegations surface in North Carolina," a chapter in the case of Lee Jones.

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