Victor and Megan Turner: SC father and stepmother arrested for killing their 5-year-old son 30 years ago

Victor and Megan Turner: SC father and stepmother arrested for killing their 5-year-old son 30 years after his body was found
Authorities said that Justin Turner had been sexually assaulted with some kind of cylindrical object (Berkeley County Sheriff’s Office)

BERKELEY COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA: The father and stepmother of a five-year-old South Carolina boy, who was sexually assaulted and killed, have been arrested more than three decades after the child’s body was found stuffed into the cabinet of the couple’s camper.

Authorities announced that Victor Lee Turner and Megan Renee Turner were taken into custody on Monday, January 8, and charged with capital murder in the 1989 slaying of young Justin Turner. 

Justin Turner was on his way to a friend’s house when he vanished

According to a news release from the Berkeley County Sheriff’s Office, authorities believe that on March 3, 1989, Justin left his home at about 11 am and was on his way to a friend’s house to catch the bus for school when he vanished. 



 

Megan Turner, who was known as Pamela Turner, told authorities that she did not feel well that day so she remained at the house and did not accompany her stepson to the bus as she normally did.

“That afternoon when Pamela Turner went to meet the school bus she found that Justin was not on it nor had he been at school that day,” the sheriff’s office wrote, adding “The neighbor whom Justin was supposed to meet that morning had gone outside with her grandson to meet the bus but never saw Justin that morning.”

When was Justin Turner's body found?

It was later disclosed that Justin never made it to the bus stop that morning and was absent from school. A multi-agency search of the surrounding area, which included civilian volunteers, went on for two days before Victor Turner found the boy’s dead body “in a cabinet located in a camper in the yard of the residence.”

What did Justin Turner's autopsy report state?

A subsequent autopsy determined that Justin’s manner of death was a homicide and the cause of death was ligature strangulation. Authorities also said that he had been sexually assaulted with some kind of cylindrical object.

According to CBS affiliate WCSC, authorities said that both of the Turners exhibited “deliberate actions and obvious behavior” indicating they “knew exactly” where Justin’s body had been hidden. Documents also detailed Victor Turner’s demeanor after he located his son’s body.

“Rather than react to finding his son and personally checking for any indication of life whatsoever, (Victor Turner) instead backed out of the camper commenting, ‘He’s in there, my son is in there. Somebody’s hurt him,’” a warrant reportedly stated. “(Victor Turner) later told investigators, ‘He looked dead. I could feel that something was wrong with him. I did NOT touch him.’”

Victor Turner also allegedly made inculpatory statements prior to the discovery of the body, such as asking authorities what would happen if a family member had “done harm to the victim, such as killed him.” “Within this transparent question, an apparent awareness of (Justin’s) fate was revealed prior to the discovery of (Justin’s) body,” authorities wrote.

When was Justin Turner's stepmother indicted?

Justin’s stepmother was indicted by a grand jury about nine months after the body was discovered and charged with his murder. However, prosecutors later dropped those charges due to insufficient evidence.

When did the case reopen?

The sheriff’s office said that its Cold Case Unit reopened the case in 2021 and began reevaluating evidence utilizing new technology that was not available at the time of Justin’s murder.

“We have a lot of forensic evidence. We got here because of new technology and forensic medicine,” Sheriff Duane Lewis said during a Wednesday afternoon, January 10, news conference, adding “We all know how things have progressed over the years and we kept pushing and plugging and pulling to finally get what we needed to make an arrest.”

Lewis, who at one point said, “I can’t think of a more tragic, horrendous murder,” also told reporters that the Turners haven’t taken much of an interest in their son’s death, moving away and cutting off communication with the community.

“Isn’t that strange? I never got one phone call, one phone call from his daddy or stepmother (saying) ‘What are y’all doing about my son’s death?’ Not one,” Lewis said, adding “What does that tell you?” The Turners are currently being held in the Hill-Finklea Detention Center without bond, jail records show.

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