KY CRYSTAL ROGERS: Missing from Bardstown, KY - 3 July 2015 - Age 35 *ARREST*

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The parents of a Kentucky woman last seen 10 days ago suspect foul play in her disappearance.

Crystal Rogers, 35, a mother of five, was last seen by her live-in boyfriend, Brooks Houck, on July 3, according to the Nelson County Sheriff’s Office.

Houck has said he had nothing to with Rogers’ disappearance. He has been extremely cooperative with investigators, police said, and he took a polygraph test.

A Kentucky police officer has been fired for allegedly tampering with an investigation regarding the missing girlfriend of his brother, who has just been named the only suspect in her disappearance.

Crystal Rogers, 35, has been missing since July 3. Her boyfriend, Brooks Houck, has claimed the last time he saw the mother of five was the night before, playing games on her phone.

The only clue in Rogers disappearance was her maroon Chevy Impala, which was found unlocked and with a flat tire on Bluegrass Parkway on Saturday.

Inside were her keys, purse and uncharged phone.

edited by staff to add media link
 
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Updated: 4:42 PM EDT Jul 3, 2024
Story by Matthew Keck

NELSON COUNTY, Ky. —
A Nelson County judge has denied a motion to dismiss the charges against one of the men charged in Crystal Rogers' death.

Attorneys for Steve Lawson argued that he was promised immunity in exchange for his cooperation in the case.

On Wednesday, a judge ruled that Lawson broke the immunity agreement because he did not tell the truth.

Back in May, prosecutors claimed that Steve Lawson played a larger role in Rogers' death. They pointed to a phone call Steve made after being jailed in Nelson County, where he admitted to lying while being questioned by investigators.

Steve and his son, Joseph Lawson, are both charged with complicity to a murder in connection to Rogers' death. Rogers' former boyfriend, Brooks Houck, is also charged in the case, facing murder.

July 3 also marks nine years since Rogers was last seen.

Houck is scheduled to be in court Monday for a hearing on a motion to be tried separately from the Lawsons.
 

Updated: 4:42 PM EDT Jul 3, 2024
Story by Matthew Keck

NELSON COUNTY, Ky. —
A Nelson County judge has denied a motion to dismiss the charges against one of the men charged in Crystal Rogers' death.

Attorneys for Steve Lawson argued that he was promised immunity in exchange for his cooperation in the case.

On Wednesday, a judge ruled that Lawson broke the immunity agreement because he did not tell the truth.

Back in May, prosecutors claimed that Steve Lawson played a larger role in Rogers' death. They pointed to a phone call Steve made after being jailed in Nelson County, where he admitted to lying while being questioned by investigators.

Steve and his son, Joseph Lawson, are both charged with complicity to a murder in connection to Rogers' death. Rogers' former boyfriend, Brooks Houck, is also charged in the case, facing murder.

July 3 also marks nine years since Rogers was last seen.

Houck is scheduled to be in court Monday for a hearing on a motion to be tried separately from the Lawsons.
Not too bright. So he had a deal based on no lying and then he says he lied and did so in a jail phone call. Good decision by the judge.
 

Steve Lawson told confidential informant Brooks Houck had nothing to do with Crystal Rogers' murder​

Attorneys for Brooks Houck told a judge Monday it would be “unfair” and close to impossible to put Houck and his two co-defendants on trial together for the murder of Crystal Rogers because of how much false information was provided.

Steve Lawson has given about 20 hours of contradictory testimony and information about the case and, unless he testified at a joint trial, Houck would be unable to confront Lawson about the lies, attorney Brian Butler told Nelson County Judge Charles Simms III.

Butler said Lawson twice told confidential informants in 2020 that, "I don't think Brooks had anything to do with" Rogers' disappearance. But during hours of interviews with investigators and in front of a grand jury, Lawson changed his story repeatedly.

For example, he also said he was paid $50,000 by Houck to move Rogers' vehicle.

"Steve Lawson was the connection (to Houck) for the government’s case," Butler said.

And, without being able to question him, Butler said the defense would have to show hours of testimony and interviews that prove Lawson lied repeatedly and told investigators what they wanted to hear in hopes of getting immunity.

"When the trial comes, if we do them together, it becomes about hours and hours and hours of Steve Lawson and his inconsistent statements” and promises made to him by investigators, Butler said. If the three men are tried together, "everyone will be back here in two years doing it again."

Butler played some of the interviews Lawson had with investigators over the last few years, showing that at times, Lawson said Houck seemed not to know what to tell investigators.

"What the Hell do you want me to say," he told them at one point.

But Lawson told investigators he "wanted to be on their team and help them out," Butler said.

In one instance, Butler said that Lawson told investigators that he called Houck shortly after Rogers' disappeared and told him, "The job is done," referring to moving her car.

In addition, the other co-defendant, Joseph Lawson -- Steve's son -- is shown in a video interview being told by investigators what they believe happened. He didn’t say anything audible during the interview but Butler told the judge Joseph Lawson later said "he wanted to tell investigators what they wanted to hear."

"You can’t coach someone more than that. He starts with the government's theory and ends with the government's theory," Butler said. "It's incredible. I wouldn’t believe it if it weren’t on the tape. But that happened. If there was ever a case that shouldn’t be joined, it’s this one."

Monday's hearing follows a request by the prosecution to try all three men together on Feb. 10, 2025, given they are facing the same charges and allegedly worked with each other. One trial would also be less traumatizing for the family and friends of Rogers, according to the prosecution.

Prosecutor Shane Young asked a judge to join the cases into one trial since they are alleged to have "acted in concert to accomplish the murder of Crystal Rodgers and to dispose of evidence which would conceal the murder."

On Monday, prosecutors argued they would take out references to Houck from Lawson's statements.

Prosecutor Teresa Young said the prosecution would not use grand jury testimony provided by Lawson against Houck and said Butler's argument was "clear as mud."
 
I don't even know WHAT to think other than here comes the b.s. I think this is a case that few if any doubt HE did it, caused it, had help, etc. And that justice has been a long time coming and that is still hasn't been served or decided other than the men are finally in jail and custody.

I think it's probably intentionally back and forth to keep the case, appeals and all of them with chances?

I mean they got away with this for a long, long, long time. The influence, the control? There's still her dad's murder...

Prosecution and state need to go HARD. Whether the trials are separated or not. I think a jury CAN separate things and follow even what can be convoluted if put right, look at Daybell. I don't know, I just don't.

But here's where I'm at if the P and say the family want it to be one trial then there is a reason and in that case, I'd have it kept that way or fight for such. If the D of Lawson wants it separate there's a reason as well and I'd fight for it not to happen.

But it shouldn't be about county or state money and trying more than one case and it shouldn't even be about putting the family through more than one trial as although their feelings should matter, if they want justice after all this time, then it should be about the best chance and how to try them (separately or together). Not that I'd wish their years and trial/s to come on anyone.

I guess what I'm saying is I'd go against anything the D wants and hard. In this one at least. They must think it a benefit for him to be tried separately or a better chance for him. And so, just on that basis, I'd go hard against it. As long as the joint trial isn't just about $$

Don't know. I just know it has been a long time coming and that the P needs to go in swinging and have their ducks in a row. As many as they managed to get with this filthy "clan'. AGain if about $$$, it shouldn't be but if his attorney wants the trial separate then I say fight to keep them together. Jmho.
 

Attorney says cell phone tracking could be key evidence in Crystal Rogers case​

Louisville Attorney Nick Mudd, who has been following the Crystal Rogers case closely, said a certain piece of technology could be key evidence in the investigation.

In an interview with WHAS11 News on Thursday, Mudd said cell phone triangulation technology could show approximately where the suspects were when Crystal Rogers went missing.

"There's this big thing about cell phone records and a big thing now and in cases the past five to 10 years has been cell phone triangulation," Mudd said. "We all carry them. You got one, I've got one, and it's little dots that can tell you where you've been, where you were at and how long you were there."

Mudd said he's confident that technology existed nine years ago when Crystal Rogers disappeared from Bardstown.

"I do think given the size of the record dump from the phones that that could become the key to this case," he said.



Nelson County Judge Charles Simms delayed a decision Thursday pertaining to one of the suspects in the disappearance of Crystal Rogers.

Joseph Lawson appeared in court via Zoom. His attorney is asking for Lawson to be tried separately from his father, Steve Lawson, and primary suspect Brooks Houck.

The judge hasn't made a ruling on splitting up the trial yet. Attorney Mudd said a defense lawyer on this case would want to go third, so you have the benefit of two other statements under oath by witnesses. This would create a "minefield" for a witness testifying.
 

Crystal Rogers trial moved outside of Nelson County​

A judge confirmed on Friday that the three on trial for the death of Crystal Rogers will not be held in Nelson County.

According to FOX 56’s sister station, WDRB, it is still unclear if Brooks Houck, Joseph Lawson, and Steve Lawson will be tried together or separately. In March, a judge agreed that, due to the immense publicity surrounding Rogers’ 2015 disappearance, it would be difficult to find an unbiased jury in Nelson County.

The trial will be held in either Warren County or Christian County, per WDRB.

The next hearing is scheduled for Oct. 25 and the men are scheduled to begin trial at 9 a.m. on Feb. 10, 2025, according to court documents.

Crystal Rogers murder case heading to Warren Co., not Christian​

It looks like the Crystal Rogers murder case will not be coming to Christian County, as the parties involved in the case have chosen to locate it to Warren County.

That’s according to Judge Charles Simms of Nelson County Circuit Court, who says that the Commonwealth and all three defendants in the case—Brooks Houck, Steve Lawson and Joseph Lawson—have agreed to a transfer of venue to Warren County instead.

The idea of it coming to Christian County had been considered, but Warren County is a closer venue to Nelson County, while still meeting the wants of limiting bias in a potential jury pool.
 

Statements made to FBI on only 2 dates by suspect in Crystal Rogers case will be allowed at trial​

In a 27 page court filing on Monday, Prosecutor Shane Young and Joseph Lawson's attorney agreed on one thing. Statements Joseph made to the FBI only on two dates, Oct. 16 and Oct. 20, 2020, will be used in the trial.

The rest of the court filing shows some case law and several pages that say "sealed document."

The judge is still deciding if the trial for Joseph, his father, Steve, and Brooks Houck, should be separate or not.

Right now, all three are scheduled to stand trial in February in Bowling Green.



Joseph Lawson, 32, pleaded not guilty in September 2023 to criminal conspiracy to commit murder and tampering with physical evidence in the Rogers case. He is not charged with Rogers' murder, but prosecutors instead charged him with conspiracy, meaning they believe he was involved in some fashion with whomever killed Rogers.

The maximum sentence for the conspiracy charge is 10-20 years in prison.

In addition, the indictment charges Joseph Lawson with complicity to tampering with physical evidence when he "destroyed, mutilated, concealed, removed or altered physical evidence." The maximum penalty for that charge is one to five years in prison.

Steve Lawson, according to a Dec. 6 Nelson County indictment, agreed to "aid one or more persons in the planning or commission" of the death of another and then "destroyed, mutilated, concealed, removed" or altered physical evidence on July 3 or July 4, 2015, when Rogers disappeared.

Houck's indictment accused him of "acting alone or in complicity with another" committing the offense of murder of Rogers. He's also charged with tampering when he "destroyed, mutilated, concealed, removed or altered" physical evidence, according to the indictment.
 

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