Woman
fights parole for killer of sister in 1974
College freshman was raped, stabbed By Jennifer Feehan, Toledo
Blade, April
4 2011
Kay Miller was 17 when her
older sister — her only
sister — was snatched from her bicycle not far from
their Van Wert, Ohio, home, brutally raped, and murdered.
Thirty-seven years later, almost to the day, the man
who killed Cheryl Ann Felger will again go before the
Indiana Parole Board seeking release.
"I hope he does not get out," Ms. Miller, 54,
said. "If they have to let him out for some God unknown
reason, I hope he doesn't mess with anyone else, and I
hope he leaves me and my family and my friends alone."
Ernest Tope, 57, of Decatur, Ind., is to go before the
parole board April 14 at the Correctional Industrial Facility
where he is housed.
Tope was 21 on April 12, 1974, when he and Timothy Heckert,
20, also of Decatur, left a Van Wert bar where they'd
been drinking and shooting pool and spotted Ms. Felger,
19, riding her bicycle to a friend's house. They abducted
her, sexually assaulted her in the car, then drove her
to a field near Decatur where Tope stabbed her 96 times
and left her to die.
Ms. Felger's body was found the next day. Her father,
George Felger, had the grim task of identifying his daughter's
remains.
Tope was convicted by a jury in Allen County, Indiana,
of first-degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison,
but a change in Indiana's sentencing laws subsequently
made him eligible for release.
Heckert, who claimed to have stayed in the car while
Tope killed Ms. Felger, pleaded guilty to second-degree
murder and was sentenced to 15 to 25 years.
He was paroled, then imprisoned again for unrelated convictions.
When Tope came up for parole
in previous years — 1995,
1996, 2001, and 2006 — Ms. Miller said her father
worked with her and other supporters to collect signatures
on petitions imploring the parole board to keep the killer
behind bars.
With her father's death two years ago, she and a friend
are carrying on the work this time, helped online by Bret
Vinocur, a volunteer victims advocate who runs the Web
site blockparole.com.
Mr. Vinocur said he was appalled by the brutality of
the violence in Ms Felger's case.
"This girl was stabbed 96 times and the coroner
said she didn't die right away," he said. "She
lived for half an hour in that field with 96 stab wounds."
Ms. Felger's story is recounted on the Web site, which
provides a link to send an e-mail or letter to the parole
board opposing Tope's release.
Ms. Miller said she has had petitions in businesses in
and around Van Wert and will mail the hundreds of signatures
to the parole board along with a personal letter on her
sister's behalf. She does not plan to attend the parole
hearing.
"I'd kind of like to go, but I don't really want
to go to the prison because I don't think I want to be
that close," she said. "They said he would be
in the same room with all the people having those hearings.
I don't want him to get an up-close look at what I look
like."
Ms. Miller said her only sibling was always on the go.
She was a freshman at Wright State University's Celina
campus when she was killed.
"She was very smart. She knew what she wanted," Ms.
Miller recalled. "She pretty much went after what
she wanted to do."
Ms. Felger was particular about her things, which meant
her younger sister often was called on the carpet if she
borrowed clothes or other possessions without asking.
Ms. Miller said that's why she and her father knew something
was wrong the night her sister's bicycle was found parked
along the street a couple blocks from their house.
"The night when my Dad saw her bicycle sitting up
against the telephone pole he came back and asked me to
go check and see if it was hers," Ms. Miller said,
adding that it was and she brought it home. "I said
she would have never left her bike being that close. She
was real particular about making sure her stuff was where
it should be."
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