5 minute read

Witnesses take the stand in ongoing murder trial

Next Article
PUBLIC NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICES

BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

In the early stages of the investigation into the fatal shooting of a 23-year-old Centennial man, authorities lacked an eyewitness. at changed when law enforcement made contact with Joseph Martin, according to the prosecution in the trial of Terrell Jones, the man accused of pulling the trigger.

Martin spoke to law enforcement in the east Denver suburbs in November 2009, not long after the shooting, saying investigators weren’t looking for the right car and that a group tried to steal from the victim, according to the prosecution.

Eventually, Martin pleaded guilty as being involved in the incident that led to the death of Andrew Graham.

Graham, a University of Colorado graduate who had plans for grad school, was killed around 5:30 a.m. on Nov. 6, 2009. He was shot in the front yard of a home in the Willow Creek neighborhood of Centennial near County Line Road and Yosemite Street.

In a case that doesn’t appear to rely on physical evidence, the varying stories of witnesses is taking center stage.

Jones’ trial in the Arapahoe County District Court started in early May and could run for weeks, possibly until June 2, according to the state judicial branch website.

Here’s a look at some key moments from the rst week of the trial.

‘Bag snatching’

Martin was “kind of like couch hopping, hotel-room hopping” in November 2009, he told the court.

Martin was 17 at the time of the incident, according to the prosecution.

For money, he would do what the prosecution called “bag snatching,” attempting to sell what was inside, he told the court.

On Nov. 5, 2009, Martin was “hanging out” in downtown Denver, and he saw someone who had something he wanted, “like a laptop bag,” he said. Other people were involved, including Jones and other defendants Allen Ford and Clarissa Lockhart, Martin said.

He watched Graham, who went toward the RTD light rail, he said.

“A few of us hopped on the light rail — a few of us hopped in (a) vehicle,” Martin said.

e group followed Graham to the Park Meadows mall area, he said, near the edge of Centennial.

ey followed him a small distance farther, and eventually one of them told Graham to give them his bag, Martin said.

“He starts arguing with us, saying he’s not going to give us his possession,” Martin said. Graham backed away, and “we just all rushed him and took it.” e group’s goal was to steal the bag and leave, and Martin wasn’t aware Graham would be shot, he said, adding he doesn’t know what prompted the shot.

Graham got o the ground and “took o running,” Martin said. “ at’s when I heard a shot.” Jones was holding the gun, Martin said.

Denver crimes backdrop 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 defendants are African American. One defendant, Martin, was listed as American Indian on the state Department of Corrections website.

Graham’s death took place in the context of an outbreak of robberies and assaults in the downtown Denver area in 2009.

A 2016 Arapahoe County grand jury indicted Lockhart, Ford, Kendall Adam Austin and Martin — teenagers at the time of Graham’s shooting. e four were arrested in January 2017 in connection with Graham’s death.

Grand juries are sometimes used to decide whether authorities have enough evidence to charge a suspect.

Ford, Lockhart and Austin had been linked to the 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 for crime in September 2009, 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.

Prosecutors moved to dismiss all of the charges against Austin in October 2019 after deciding it no longer had “a reasonable likelihood of success at trial,” according to Austin’s defense attorney.

(Jones was not charged as a suspect in any of the assaults or robberies in the Denver crime outbreak, according to the court proceedings in the case of Graham’s death.)

Martin allegedly connected to others

When Denver police would put pressure on an area during the 2009 Denver crimes, the parties suspected of involvement would simply move, said Tyrone Campbell, a former Denver police o cer who testi ed at trial in the Graham case.

“We would see those people leave and go in a bunch of di erent directions,” Campbell said.

Martin said there were a lot of police in the downtown Denver area, and he “decided to take it somewhere else.” e police presence was a reason why the group got on the light rail instead of robbing Graham downtown, Martin said.

Jones and Martin had attended school together, Martin said.

Ford is also someone Martin had met, and he would see him from time to time, Martin said. Martin was also familiar with Lockhart, he added.

Ford and Jones were pictured in a photo from social media shown in court, according to testimony in the trial.

Stories that conflict

Evan Marcia Zuckerman, a defense attorney for Jones, argued Martin has told con icting stories about the shooting.

“Martin agreed seven times — seven times — to meet with investigators,” Zuckerman told the jury.

He said at one point he doesn’t know who was involved in the case, and soon after, he said Jones was involved — and later, he said he doesn’t know who was involved, Zuckerman said.

Zuckerman said there’s an “astonishing lack of any physical evidence” in the case.

“I mean, like, nothing — nothing physical evidence wise that connected

About Letters To The Editor

Colorado Community Media welcomes letters to the editor. Please note the following rules:

• Email your letter to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com. Do not send via postal mail. Put the words “letter to the editor” in the email subject line.

• Submit your letter by 5 p.m. on Wednesday in order to have it considered for publication in the following week’s newspaper.

• Letters must be no longer than 400 words.

• Letters should be exclusively submitted to Colorado Community Media and should not submitted to other outlets or previously posted on websites or social media. Submitted letters become the or connects to this day, Terrell Jones to the murder of Andrew Graham,” Zuckerman said. “And you know what else? ere’s no physical evidence that connects Joseph Martin, Allen Ford (or) Clarissa Lockhart to the murder of Andrew Graham.”

Chris Wilcox, a prosecutor with Colorado’s 18th Judicial District Attorney’s O ce, said Martin, Lockhart and Ford are “three people that you will hear give con icting statements” but added that “all three of these individuals identi ed Terrell Jones … as the man who pulled the trigger.” property of CCM and should not be republished elsewhere.

See more information about the other defendants’ outcomes in court in previous coverage at tinyurl.com/ GrahamCase.

• Letters advocating for a political candidate should focus on that candidate’s qualifications for o ce. We cannot publish letters that contain unverified negative information about a candidate’s opponent. Letters advocating for or against a political candidate or ballot issue will not be published within 12 days of an election.

• Publication of any given letter is at our discretion. Letters are published as space is available.

• We will edit letters for clarity, grammar, punctuation and length and write headlines (titles) for letters at our discretion.

This article is from: