
2 minute read
Man faces murder trial 13 years after shooting
Jury trial set
BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM



irteen years after the fatal shooting of a Centennial man— and several years after the court sentenced other defendants in the same case — the man prosecutors accuse of pulling the trigger, Terrell Jones, is facing trial.
e case became a long legal saga that has seen ve di erent defendants in court, two grand juries and multiple plea deals.
Andrew Graham, a University of Colorado graduate who had plans for grad school, was found fatally shot about 5:30 a.m. on Nov. 6, 2009, in the front yard of a home in the Willow Creek neighborhood of Centennial near County Line Road and Yosemite Street.
A few hours before Graham, 23, was found — just before midnight — video surveillance captured Graham riding an RTD light rail train and exiting at the station near Park Meadows Shopping Mall in Lone Tree.
Graham had been making living arrangements in Boulder that day and would often walk from the station to his parents’ house in nearby Willow Creek a couple miles away, his mother told Colorado Community Media at the time.
Jones was arrested in March 2020, KCNC-CBS4 reported. Jones was 16 years old at the time of the shooting.
In a case that doesn’t appear to rely on physical evidence, the varying stories of witnesses will take center stage.


Chris Wilcox, a prosecutor with the 18th Judicial District Attorney’s O ce, foreshadowed the type of testimony witnesses will likely give.
“ ere are going to be some people that told one story and told a second story and told a third story,” Wilcox told potential jurors in Arapahoe County District Court on May 5.
Jones’ trial could run for weeks, possibly until June 2, according to the state judicial branch website. Here’s a look at the details that led up to this point.
Case revolved around group of defendants e four were arrested in January 2017 in connection with Graham’s death. e codefendants described a plot to rob Graham, whom they saw as “a white male who might have money,” according to the a davit for Jones’ arrest. Jones and three other codefendants are African American. One codefendant, Joseph Martin, was listed as American Indian on the state Department of Corrections website.
A 2016 Arapahoe County grand jury indicted Clarissa Jae Lockhart, Allen Deshawn Ford, Kendall Adam Austin and Joseph Martin — also teenagers at the time of the shooting.
Grand juries are sometimes used to decide whether authorities have enough evidence to charge a suspect.
Ford, Lockhart and Austin had been linked to a string of racemotivated robberies and assaults in downtown Denver in 2009, according to the a davit and court proceedings in the Graham case. Suspects in that rash of crimes told police they targeted White males because they assumed they had money and wouldn’t ght back or present a threat.

Lockhart and Austin pleaded guilty to attempted robbery in September 2009 incidents, and Ford pleaded guilty to a bias-motivated crime involving “bodily injury” and pleaded guilty to assault in August 2009 incidents, according to online court records.

Separately, in the case of Graham’s death, Jones was charged with rstdegree murder after deliberation and rst-degree felony murder, according to court records.
As it relates to this case, a count of rst-degree felony murder can be charged against anyone in a group that is allegedly involved in a serious crime in which a death occurs. e charge applies even if a particular member of the group is not believed to have directly caused the death.
Long road to case

Despite the years it took to arrest Jones, his arrest a davit did not mention any physical evidence that points to any of the defendants. An arrest a davit is a document that lists the alleged facts surrounding an arrest.
In court in October 2020, Evan Marcia Zuckerman, a defense attorney for Jones, hammered on what she argued are inconsistencies in the