Police capture inmate suspected in two killings

Manhunt shuts down Virginia Tech campus

Escaped inmate William Morva is escorted out of the Montgomery County magistrate's office Monday in Christiansburg, Va. After a manhunt that shut down the Virginia Tech campus in Blacksburg, Va., police captured Morva, an escapee suspected in the slayings of a hospital guard and a sheriff's deputy.

? A manhunt for an escaped convict suspected in the slayings of a hospital guard and a sheriff’s deputy shut down the Virginia Tech campus on the first day of classes Monday as sharpshooters were posted on university rooftops and students scrambled for safety.

Authorities later captured William Morva, 24, after he was found hiding in a briar patch along a trail off-campus, Blacksburg Police Chief Kim Crannis said. The spot was about 150 yards from where the sheriff’s deputy was slain during the intense search Monday morning. A weapon also was recovered, but police would not elaborate.

Hundreds of police scoured the 2,600-acre campus as Virginia Tech Vice President Kurt Krause canceled classes for the school’s 26,000 students and sent some 6,000 professors and other workers home.

Morva had escaped from a hospital – about two miles from campus – where he had been taken for treatment of a sprained wrist and ankle early Sunday.

According to police, Morva overpowered another Montgomery County sheriff’s deputy at the hospital, took the deputy’s gun and then shot an unarmed hospital security guard. The guard was identified as Derrick McFarland, 26.

The deputy was in stable condition with a concussion and other severe head injuries he suffered in the attack.

Morva had been jailed while awaiting trial on charges of attempting to rob a store last year and apparently shed his orange prison jumpsuit after escaping.

He then is suspected of gunning down sheriff’s Cpl. Eric E. Sutphin as the decorated police veteran got closer to the fugitive on a hiking and biking trail about 7 a.m. Monday.

Morva was charged with capital murder, use of a firearm in a felony, escape and felony assault on a police officer. He had not been charged with Monday’s shooting.

Crannis would not say whether Morva had contacted anyone or been spotted by residents while he was on the lam.