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Investigators suspend search for missing Ashe man's remains

Journal photo by Monte Mitchell

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Published: June 23, 2009

CRUMPLER

Investigators today called off their search for the remains of an Ashe County man missing since Feb. 24, 2007 after digging up about 100 feet of Smithey Road, beside the North Fork of the New River.

Ashe County sheriff James Williams said today that they called off the search about 4 p.m. today and have no plans to resume.

Williams also said he has no more leads as to the whereabouts of Jimmy Blevins' remains.

Authorities say they suspect that Blevins was killed by his uncle, Freddie Hammer. Hammer is serving life in prison without the possibility of parole in Virginia after pleading guilty May 22 to killing three men on a Grayson County Christmas tree farm on Jan. 24, 2008.

"Since Mr. Hammer has been sent away for good now, as we hoped, we had folks come forward with information that led us to this spot," Williams said yesterday.

When Blevins disappeared from his trailer beside N.C. 16, he left the television on and chicken cooking in the crock pot. A witness said she saw Hammer pick up Blevins and drive off in Hammer's truck. That's the last time Blevins was seen.

Hammer has denied killing his nephew.

At the time Blevins disappeared, Smithey Road was a dirt road and the state was widening it and paving it. Heavy construction equipment was parked nearby.

A witness reported seeing Hammer in the dark, aboard one of the pieces of equipment, which was running.

"(Hammer) was seen on a track hoe here late in the night, on or about the day Blevins went missing," Williams said.

Hammer, who ran a firewood business and worked as a handyman, was an experienced heavy-equipment operator.

"Freddie's good at running them," Williams said. "In a few scoops he could have been 15 feet deep."

Investigators were working on a theory that Hammer buried Blevins under the dirt road and then let the Department of Transportation pave over the site.

On Friday, investigators with the Ashe County Sheriff's Office and the State Bureau of Investigation were along Smithey Road with a professor from N.C. State University who operated ground-penetrating radar looking for anomalies in the soil. Searchers formed a grid pattern and used those results, along with the witness's description, to target an area to dig. The spot is near where the road starts to run beside the river.

The spot where they were digging is less than 2½ miles from the Riverside store where Jimmy Blevins' mother, Janet Blevins, works. Soon after Jimmy Blevins disappeared, Hammer came to visit Janet Blevins in the store. He walked past the missing persons flyers for Jimmy, and handed her $200 he had owed Jimmy.

Just before Christmas that year, Hammer visited Janet Blevins again, this time at her home. She said she begged Hammer to tell her where Jimmy Blevins was, but he would not. But he said something that chilled her.

"I watch Court TV," he told her, "and they've been looking for a man for 10 years, and the law had walked all over his grave looking for him."

Hammer escaped the death penalty in connection with the Grayson County Christmas tree murders after entering a plea deal after investigators dug up the murder weapons and missing cash inside a barn at a private campground where Hammer had a trailer in Cripple Creek, Va. Hammer had told a fellow inmate where the items were buried.

He responded to questions from the Winston-Salem Journal with a letter he wrote from jail on Jan. 31.

"I like your biggest question, 'What happened to Jimmy Blevins'" Hammer wrote. "I'm so glad someone out there is still searching for him and the truth. It's my understanding that the police have practly(sic) given up on him. This should not happen to anyone…. Jimmy is out there somewhere and somebody knows what happened to him. Questions still need to be asked."

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