NEW CASTLE —
Prosecutors Tuesday began building their case against Jordan Brown.
The proceeding to determine if the 14-year-old is responsible for the death of Kenzie Houk, 26, and her unborn child is being heard by Lawrence County Judge John W. Hodge.
The adjudication hearing — what the trial process for a juvenile is called — is expected to last a week. There is no jury — a judge makes the determination — but Hodge is not expected to rule immediately.
Jordan is charged with the Feb. 20, 2009, shooting of Houk, his father’s pregnant fiancée. He was 11 years old then but charged as an adult with two counts of homicide. The case was eventually transferred to juvenile court.
If found responsible for the shooting, Jordan will be placed in treatment within the juvenile system. He could be held until he turns 21, or released sooner if he responds to treatment.
Had the case remained in criminal court and the teen been found guilty, he could have been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole.
Jordan was at Tuesday’s proceedings, then taken out of the courthouse through the parking garage and returned to the Edmund L. Thomas Adolescent Center in Erie where he has been since March 2009.
The case is closed to the news media and most of the public. Media representatives also are being barred from the second floor of the courthouse where the hearing is taking place.
Lawrence County Sheriff Perry Quahliero said that is for “safety reasons.” He and his deputies maintained security, even asking “several bikers” outside the building to move along.
However, Hodge has allowed immediate family members representing Houk and Jordan in the courtroom.
They are Houk’s parents Jack and Deborah Houk, her sister Jennifer Kraner, Jordan’s father Chris Brown and grandmother Janice Brown Myers, and Cynthia Wiseman, Chris Brown’s aunt.
During a break, Houk family friend Brenda Mooney said she doesn’t understand why some members are allowed in but others are not. Kenzie’s grandmother would have liked to have been included, she noted.
“There is no justice,” Mooney said. “Two lives were taken. Kenzie got no second chance, her baby got no chance at all.”
At the lunch break, Jack Houk said testimony was hard to hear. One witness, a tree trimmer working on the New Beaver Borough property where Kenzie and Brown had lived with her two daughters and Jordan, broke down and cried, he said.
At the preliminary hearing, the man testified that Houk’s then-4-year-old daughter Adalynn had gone outside and said “My mommy is dead.”
“It was horrible,” Jack Houk said of the testimony.
He left the courthouse at the noon break hand-in-hand with his sister Barbara Bradley, who praised her brother and his wife for “being able to hold up.
“I don’t know how they’ve been able to do it,” she said, adding Houk and her mother had grown close and exchanged daily phone calls prior to the shooting.
Bradley added she and the rest of the family would have preferred that the hearing be open to the public.
“I just wish this was over,” she said. “I hate to see (Jack and Debbie Houk) have to deal with this all over again.”
She added there will be no winners. “Whichever way this goes people will be upset.”
When proceedings concluded just after 3 p.m., Debbie Houk said family members had been asked not to comment. She didn’t.
Senior Deputy Attorney General Anthony J. Krastek, who is prosecuting, said, “The case is going as expected.”
Krastek called nine witnesses Tuesday including a pathologist, paramedic, school bus driver and state troopers. He said he anticipates concluding his portion of the case Wednesday.
Defense attorneys Dennis Elisco and Stephen Colafella will then present their case. An attempt to reach Colafella Tuesday night was unsuccessful.
(Call Nancy Lowry at (724) 654-6651, extension 623, or email: nlowry@ncnewsonline.com)
Jordan Brown Case
Jordan Brown’s hearing gets under way in county courtroom
- Jordan Brown Case
-
-
Prosecutors granted stay in Jordan Brown decision
A hearing on the status of a boy accused in a 2009 fatal shooting has been canceled. The hearing on 15-year-old Jordan Brown’s detention had been planned for Lawrence County Court today, but was canceled after prosecutors requested, and received, a stay in the proceedings.
-
Jordan Brown Case: Next step unclear, attorneys say
The Jordan Brown case has stretched into its fifth year. But it is not over yet. And the lawyers representing the 15-year-old don’t know exactly what will happen next.
-
Jordan Brown Case: Victim’s parents ‘devastated’ by ruling
Kenzie Houk’s parents are devastated — again. The first time was when she was fatally shot in February, 2009. The second time was Wednesday, when they learned of a ruling by the Pennsylvania Superior Court.
-
Appeals court overturns Jordan Brown ruling
A Pennsylvania appeals court has overturned the Jordan Brown decision in Lawrence County. As a result, a new juvenile proceeding will be needed for the now-15-year-old accused in the 2009 shooting death of his father’s pregnant fiancée, Kenzie Houk.
-
Jordan Brown heading to George Junior
Jordan Brown is moving closer to home. At a hearing Thursday, Judge John W. Hodge approved transferring the 15-year-old from a facility in central Pennsylvania to one in western Pennsylvania. Jordan was in the courtroom, which was closed to the public.
-
Jordan Brown Case: Observers comment on teen’s first treatment review
Kenzie Houk’s family and friends fear Jordan Brown is not receiving the help he was promised. After Friday’s evaluation hearing, the father and sister of the woman Jordan had been found responsible for killing expressed concerns the teen may be a victim of abuse perpetrated by the system, his family and defense counsel.
-
Jordan Brown Case: Victim’s family disappointed at evaluation report
Jordan Brown visited Lawrence County on Friday. As in the past, he said nothing. In April, Jordan, 15, was found responsible for the 2009 deaths of his father’s pregnant fiancée, Kenzie Marie Houk, and her unborn child.
-
Evaluation hearing scheduled for Jordan Brown
An evaluation hearing for Jordan Brown is scheduled for Nov. 2 at the Lawrence County Government Center. The 15-year-old was found responsible for the 2009 deaths of his father’s pregnant fiancée, Kenzie Marie Houk, and her unborn child.
-
Judge rules Jordan Brown must go to a juvenile facility in Kenzie Houk slaying
After 1,173 days in an Erie holding facility, Jordan Brown is headed to a juvenile facility for counseling and treatment. Lawrence County Judge John W. Hodge made that decision regarding the 14-year-old yesterday.
-
Jordan Brown's attorneys to appeal delinquency decision
An appeal is planned in the homicide case of Jordan Brown. Defense attorney Dennis Elisco confirmed Friday that an appeal will be made, claiming a lack of evidence.
- More Jordan Brown Case Headlines
-



