Local/State
Published Thu, Nov 19, 2009 04:57 AM
Modified Thu, Nov 19, 2009 05:12 AM

Discovery of Kelly Morris' remains brings relief

CHRIS SEWARD - cseward@newsobserver.com
William Scott Morris, 35, leaves after his first court appearance in Oxford to face charges of murdering hiswife, Kelly Morris. He was charged also with arson, and was denied bail.
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- Staff Writer

CREEDMOOR -- After a 14-month hunt that sent searchers trudging through pastures and peering into open wells, sheriff's deputies found skeletal remains of Kelly Morris inside a 900-acre tract where dogs chase coyotes and foxes for sport.

Relief filled the hearts of Morris' family, who spent an anguished year chasing fruitless tips, knowing deep down that the 28-year-old mother of two was gone. They turned their attention Wednesday to her husband, William Scott Morris, 35, now charged with her murder and possibly facing the death penalty. They thought of the two children the crime left motherless.

"I knew that this day would come eventually," said her mother, Wanda Hollis. "It's like a brick lifted off your chest. I'm glad I didn't have to wait five years, or 10 years."

Raleigh retiree Al Mignacci, who never met Morris, organized the search for her almost from the day deputies found her car in September 2008, her purse and cellular phone still inside, not far from her burned house. Even Tuesday, the day deputies found Morris' bones, Mignacci was scouting new land to pore over with a core group of searchers, all determined to give the family some finality.

"It's been a long, tough struggle," he said, standing outside the sheriff's office in Oxford, not long after Morris' husband exited in an orange jail jumpsuit. "A lot of kind searchers put in a lot of time."

Morris vanished after her stepmother hugged her goodbye the night of Sept. 3, 2008.

The next morning, firefighters were called to her southern Granville County house to subdue a raging fire, later determined to be arson. Morris had not shown up for work that day, but firefighters found no trace of her in the charred house. Scott Morris was also charged with that arson Wednesday.

Morris' father, Pat Currin, began searching for his daughter, hollering at first, hoping his daughter would answer back. After three months, the hollering turned to a hunt for bones and tattered clothes as he roamed through cemeteries and pastures, looking into lakes. On Tuesday, he was fixing a corn silo at his Creedmoor construction businesses. A sign that read "Praying for Kelly" was planted out front. He spoke through a year's worth of grief.

"Fourteen months," he said. "I really don't have much to say right now."

Down every road

Mignacci, a retired IBM engineer, took the search's lead within a month of her disappearance. It wasn't his first missing-person chase. Two years before, he helped look for a Lee County woman thought to be abducted. Just last week, he was helping to find a 5-year-old Fayetteville girl killed and hidden under thick kudzu.

For Morris, Mignacci set up inside the workshop of Currin's construction company, plotting a 15-mile radius from her house, divvying up roads to other volunteers, highlighting all the combed-over territory in yellow.

When he heard the news that Morris had been found at Tar River Fox Pen, he recalled walking outside the fence line along Sam Moss-Hayes Road, passing maybe a few hundred feet from where she was found. Inside, he said, sportsmen bring dogs to chase the foxes and coyotes that wander over roughly 900 acres. A 4-foot fence surrounds the property, and dogs can be heard howling inside from the road.

On Wednesday, at least a dozen State Bureau of Investigation agents and sheriff's deputies were again walking that the fence line, this time inside and lined up abreast with wooden staffs to poke through the leaves and underbrush.

Mignacci might not have looked inside, but Bobby Proctor did.

Kelly Morris had two children: Taylor, 8, by a previous relationship, and Haley, now 6 and in custody of Pat Currin. Proctor is Taylor's uncle, and he recalled riding through the fox pen on a four-wheeler, hoping for a trace of her.

On Tuesday, Proctor recalled suspicions toward Scott Morris that have lasted since deputies named him a "person of interest" last year.

"He had his wife's car up for sale two weeks later," Proctor said. "Now if she was missing, what would he do that for?"

Motive a mystery

Family members guessed at motives Wednesday, describing the couple as both-strong willed and hot-headed.

"You get two individuals who think they're right, and they're going to defend their right to keep thinking they're right," said Mark Currin, Kelly Morris' uncle.

But other than the knowledge that Scott Morris is charged with his wife's murder, speculation about exactly what happened that day is still all they have.

Sheriff Brindell Wilkins offered little information at a Wednesday news conference and refused to answer questions.

Scott Morris hardly spoke at his first court appearance. His arrest report described the joker tattoo on his stomach and the scar on his right foot. As he was leaving, he looked directly at Hollis, the victim's mother. She said she wondered whether he was thinking that everything could have happened differently.

Outside the sheriff's department, Mignacci tried to comfort Morris' family, and they thanked him for his time and kind words. For the seeker, as well as the mourners, the search was finally over.

Staff writer Stanley B. Chambers Jr. contributed to this report.

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    Images

    • Morris was missing for 14 months.
    • State and local police officers investigate a fox pen near Creedmoor where Kelly Morris' remains were found. Searcher Al Mignacci recalled walking outside the fence, passing within maybe a few hundred feet of the body.
      STANLEY B. CHAMBERS JR. - schambers@newsobserver.com
    • Fire damage remains at the Morris home just southeast of Stem. The fire was determined to be arson.
      CHRIS SEWARD - cseward@newsobserver.com
    • Wanda Hollis, mother of the victim, talks with Al Mignacci after Sheriff Brindell Wilkins' news conference.
      CHRIS SEWARD - cseward@newsobserver.com
    •