|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|

By Mike Donoghue, Vermont News First
ST. ALBANS — A West Enosburgh man, who is accused of killing his father with a baseball bat and beating his mother, is now under investigation for a violent assault on a prison guard in St. Albans Town, officials said.
Jordan E. Lawyer, who authorities say has a long history of mental health issues, has since been transferred from the Northwest State Correctional Facility to the Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital in Berlin.
Lawyer, 29, pleaded not guilty in Vermont Superior Court on Monday Oct. 7 to a variety of criminal charges, including second-degree murder of his father, Todd Lawyer, and aggravated domestic assault on his mother, Robin Lawyer.
The charges followed a brutal, bloody attack with a baseball bat at their West Enosburgh home. They came home from work and found their adult son, Jordan, burning some of their property, police said.
Vermont State Police said Friday that Lawyer, after appearing by video from the prison for his arraignment, became combative when he was being led back to his cell by a corrections officer.
During the altercation, Lawyer, who was handcuffed, managed to kick the guard in the head while they were both on the floor, VSP spokesman Adam Silverman said.
The guard was taken to the Northwestern Medical Center for his injuries, he said.
The incident was captured on the prison’s security video, Silverman said.
Lawyer appeared a little unhappy during his video arraignment. He initially said he did not want to be arraigned by video and wanted to appear in person at the state courthouse on Lake Street. When Judge Alison Arms offered to postpone the hearing for a day to allow the sheriff’s department to transport him, Lawyer did not appear happy with that plan. After a private consultation off camera with his public defender, Lawyer agreed to proceed by video.
Veteran Prison Superintendent Greg Hale confirmed for Vermont News First that custody of Lawyer has been transferred to the Department of Mental Health.
DMH operates a 25-bed facility in Washington County to deal with serious mental health cases. It was built after the 125-bed Vermont State Hospital in Waterbury, which handled criminally insane cases and those with mild to severe mental disabilities, closed due to flooding from Tropical Storm Irene in 2011.
Public records show Lawyer was transferred to the hospital in Berlin the afternoon of Oct. 10.
Lawyer had been held at the prison in St. Albans since his arrest after the homicide on Oct. 4.
Hale said he could only confirm there had been a recent violent attack at the prison and that it had been referred to the Vermont State Police for investigation.
Hale said the guard has since returned to work.
Franklin County State’s Attorney Bram Kranichfeld said he was unable to comment about the reported assault.
Todd Lawyer, 54, died from blunt force trauma to the head by a baseball bat, while his wife, Robin Lawyer, 58, was seriously injured and was taken Northwest Medical Center in St. Albans.
Kranichfeld had successfully argued that Jordan Lawyer needed to be held without bail because he was a serious danger to the community.
Judge Arms agreed.
Kranichfeld had noted Lawyer had two earlier violent attacks on his parents before the incident this month that led to his latest jailing.
In both earlier cases Lawyer was found incompetent to stand trial. A judge ordered him freed in both cases after the Department of Mental Health urged the court to issue non-hospitalization mental health orders. The criminal charges were dropped.
Judge Arms also agreed at the arraignment for a new psychiatric evaluation requested by Kranichfeld.
Public Defender Paul Groce said the defense also planned to get its own competency test.
Kranichfeld said at the hearing the evidence is strong. He said the prosecution would rely on a statement from Robin Lawyer that Jordan Lawyer had attacked them. Kranichfeld also said Robin Lawyer made an excited utterance to a neighbor that her son was responsible.
He also said Jordan Lawyer made an admission about the attack with the bat.
The statements made by Robin Lawyer are supported by the evidence collected by police and the findings of the medical examiner, the veteran prosecutor said.
Discover more from Vermont Daily Chronicle
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Categories: Crime










Put him in a straight jacket and keep him there.
Bring back the goon squad.
He’s just another deranged person walking the streets of Vermont when you shut down your mental institutions, where do they go, on the streets this is what you get !!
He is only one of thousands, in every city and town within the state, you could be their next victim…………………. Wake up, people !!
Two prior assaults, and the mental health system releases patient each time and advocates for non-hospitalization orders with violent assaults having occurred on another. This order is given with a long history of mental health issues in evidence. Seems like poor judgement by the doctors. If a patient has a violent history there should be repercussions, not just if you do this you’ll be back. We need to be tougher on crime and use more effective methods of treatment.
It appears some of the younger generation offenders have serious rage issues, sociopathic, psychopathic tendencies. I wonder what would show up in a full blood panel and brain scan? I wonder how many innoculations (legal or illegal) were injected into them from infant to adult that has slowly turned their brains into mush? Society has a big problem manifesting in a big way – needles from birth, to imprisonment, to grave. Would be worth looking into it rather than ignoring it.
Melissa you’re putting your finger on a big problem that the grown-ups in charge are not addressing IMHO – the unique difficulties faced by our Vermont youth of 2024. Here are facts: Unprecedented vaccination. Unprecedented exposure to substance abuse in their families. Unprecedented breakdown of nuclear families. Unprecedented access to social media. Unprecedented education about the shame of their national and racial history. Unprecedented access to unnutritious, high calorie food. Unprecedented decline in religious instruction. I’ve studied history and I’m pretty sure I’m right about all of the above. I’ve probably missed a few. And for whatever reason, our authorities are not addressing these issues whole, but (if at all) in a silo approach.
Guy et al. I again recommend VDC readers check out Edward T. Hall’s 1960s aggregation of behavioral studies entitled The Hidden Dimension. Some of the subjects were rats, some were deer and other animals, some were humans. But there was a consistent theme throughout, correlating the stress from over-crowding to changes in behavioral norms. One of the observations that intrigued me most was that as stress levels increased, aggressive behavior, pansexual behavior, and the breakdown in family child-rearing norms, also increased… almost always followed by a significant population decline.
Draw what conclusions you will.
All I can say Guy, as a Gen-Xer, I was “exposed” to all kinds of things during the 80’s and 90’s. The generations born in those decades were when gadgets, distractions, and big pharma solutions prevailed. My generation failed to rear them as we were – broken home or not – I do believe systemic poisioning of mind and body is the culprit, by design, and who made the most money off of all it and still is to this day.
Kind of sad we can “off” innocent babies in the womb, but not people like this.
I said what I said.