Page 2 of 2   <      

Fairfax Slaying Victim Identified

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Roy Gillinson told WTOP that his wife loved to walk in the park whenever the weather was nice. Neighbor Jeanne Tifft said the Gillinsons were born in England, and "the English are walkers. She would go to Huntley Meadows, and I go there myself, although I never will again, as a nice place to have a pleasant, easy, level walk."

Neighbors said that Joan Gillinson was a retired nurse and that she remained active. She was often seen walking a dog outside their building.

"Mrs. Gillinson was a quintessential sweet little old English lady who never did any harm to anybody," Tifft said. Gillinson was "very much the traditional housewife: Take care of your house; take care of your husband. She liked to go for her walks, go to a space in nature that you think is safe, find a nice bench and read your book."

Although her name wasn't released until yesterday, word spread through her building Wednesday night that she was the victim. "I knew it was my wife because she didn't come home," Roy Gillinson told the radio station. "She's the love of my life."

It's not clear why Kline was in the park. Culpeper Commonwealth's Attorney Gary Close said Kline should have been in jail after convictions for his attack on a woman March 31.

Close said that Kline and his mother had rented a cottage on a farm but that they had a dispute with the landlord and left. At 6:30 a.m. March 31, Close said, the landlord walked into the barn with her dog, and the dog started barking.

The homeowner kept walking and "noticed a dark bundle in the corner," Close said. The woman realized the bundle was a person, and the person "jumped at her, ran toward her, screamed at her and got a Taser out, and she saw an electric arc."

Close said Kline "got her to the ground. They struggled for a while. Every time he got her down, the dog got his arm, he'd get off. He came at her several times." At one point, Close said, the dog bit off a chunk of Kline's lip.

The woman's yells for help attracted a neighbor, and when the neighbor intervened, Kline ran. The landlord knew who he was and identified him to police. But Kline fled to San Diego. He was arrested there in April and returned to Culpeper for trial.

At Kline's first court appearance, a judge set bond at $15,000. Culpeper prosecutors appealed in circuit court but lost, Close said. After Kline's conviction on malicious wounding and abduction charges, for which the jury recommended a five-year prison sentence, the prosecutors again asked to have his bond revoked. Cullen declined.

Cullen, 62, was appointed a juvenile court judge in 1989, became a circuit judge in 1994 and was reappointed in 2002 to an eight-year term. He is the presiding judge in Culpeper.

Close said Virginia law presumes that people charged with malicious wounding will be held without bond unless they can prove they are not a flight risk or a danger to the community.

"But when you have vicious criminal activity that includes physical attacks like this, and invasions of your home, at that point we think a person should be held without bond," Close said.


<       2


More from Virginia

[The Presidential Field]

Blog: Virginia Politics

Here's a place to help you keep up with Virginia's overcaffeinated political culture.

Local Blog Directory

Find a Local Blog

Plug into the region's blogs, by location or area of interest.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2007 The Washington Post Company