A cop killer whose 2011 parole announcement ignited fierce criticism from politicians and police officers is back in prison.
Tim Eling hasn't been convicted of a new crime, but he violated the terms of his release by testing positive for methamphetamine during a routine drug test, said Sarah Fitzgerald, a spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections.
In 1982, Eling and accomplices dressed in ski masks and robbed Mounds Park Pharmacy. Richard Walton, an off-duty Oakdale police officer, was moonlighting as a security guard and walked into a blaze of gunfire after an employee hit the store's alarm. Walton managed to squeeze off a round, hitting Eling in the leg, before Eling shot him in the head. He died 12 hours later.
Eling was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison. But this was still a decade before Minnesota would pass a law prohibiting parole for someone found guilty of killing a police officer.
Still, the release of a cop killer is extremely rare in Minnesota, and it caught many by surprise. Legislative and law enforcement leaders demanded an explanation from DOC Commissioner Tom Roy, who made the decision to parole Eling after a review hearing.
At the time, Roy attributed his decision to Eling's good behavior in the latter half of his sentence, which included mentoring younger offenders in drug rehabilitation.
"His parole was granted because he met the requirements laid out in the law that permit it," Roy said in a statement to reporters in 2011. "If he cannot stay on that path he will not be allowed to remain in society."
Asked for comment this week, Roy called it "a sad example of the power of addiction — that even when given this opportunity, some will succumb to using substances again."