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A 16-year-old boy in Tennessee has been charged with two counts of murder in the first degree over a brutal double killing earlier this year.

Earlier this month, Judge Kenneth Bailey issued a gag order in the case in response to a defense request for additional details to be withheld from the public. Court proceedings are also not public, according to Johnson City, Tenn. ABC and CBS affiliate WJHL. Due to his age, the suspect has not been named, but prosecutors signaled their intent to try him as an adult.

In a statement to the TV station on Thursday, the Greene County Juvenile Court noted the nature of the charges. Bailey’s statement explained that four witnesses appeared during a probable cause hearing during which it was “found that there was probable cause to believe the Juvenile committed the offenses.”

Greene County District Attorney Dan Armstrong has said he plans to try the 16-year-old as an adult.

“I think it’s necessary to file to transfer him to an adult court,” the prosecutor said on April 27, 2022. “That’s the only punishment that really meets the crime. Depending on what the grand jury returned as the charge, let’s say they were to return two first-degree murder counts, at that point I would have the option of life without parole.”

Details of the slayings are particularly gruesome.

According to a court document filed before the gag order took effect, the teenager “admitted to hitting the victim in the head multiple times with a hammer.” An initial report filed by the Greene County Sheriff’s Department mentions the discovery of “puddles of blood” near a parked car and “assorted tools, some of which were covered in blood.”

On April 24, 2022, 59-year-old Sherry Cole and her 7-year-old grandson Jessie Allen were beaten to death. Deputies arrived just after midnight the next day. Officers who arrived on the scene reportedly found the suspect seated in a car with another person. Two other people were seen sitting in a nearby car.

The bodies of the victims were found outside their home on Old Snapps Ferry Road in the unincorporated community of Chuckey, Tenn.

Detective Jeff Davis filed two substantially similar statements on each of the victims.

“He stated he began planning to kill the victim earlier the same afternoon,” the first statement alleges.

“[He] admitted to striking the victim in the head with a hammer and had began planning killing earlier the same afternoon,” the second statement alleges.

The suspect was originally detained, though not formally charged, on suspicion of murder/non-negligent manslaughter. In the juvenile petition for the murder charges, prosecutors wrote that the killings evidenced “premeditated and intention.”

The 16-year-old is currently being held in a juvenile detention facility. A status hearing on the case is scheduled for July 19, 2022. A hearing on the state’s motion to transfer the case to the adult criminal system is currently slated for Aug. 23, 2022.

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Jordan Michael Allen, who was charged with two counts of First Degree Murder, had his Jury Trial continued until January 13th, 2025. Allen was just 16 years old in April of 2022 when he killed his grandmother and brother at their home on Old Snapps Ferry Road.
He was indicted by the Greene County Grand Jury in January 2023 for the death of his 7-year-old brother Jessie Allen and 59-year-old grandmother Sherry Cole. Allen, who has claimed the killings were planned, reportedly used a hammer to kill his family members, inflicting blunt force injury to both their heads and necks. The deceased bodies were found by deputies at the home in puddles of blood next to a parked Ford Bronco, along with assorted tools, some of which were covered in blood.
 
A Greene County jury found Jordan Allen guilty of first-degree murder in the 2022 killings of his brother and grandmother. He'll serve life in prison without the possibility of parole on the grounds that the murder was especially heinous.
Allen was 16 years old when prosecutors said he killed 7-year-old Jessie Allen and 59-year-old Sherry Cole with a hammer in April 2022.

A Greene County juvenile court judge decided in November 2022 that Allen would be tried as an adult.
In the week-long trial, prosecutors leaned on Allen's confession and testimony from another jail inmate who said Allen admitted to the killings and showed no remorse.

Jurors also heard from Tennessee Bureau of Investigation agents who described finding a hammer hidden under bed sheets in Allen's room, blood evidence throughout the home and clothing with apparent blood stains.
The defense argued Allen falsely confessed after hours of questioning and pressure from investigators. A cognitive psychologist took the stand and told jurors it is possible there was a false confession in this case.

Allen said his grandfather, Bill Cole, was responsible for the deaths. A TBI agent testified Allen was originally brought in as a witness because the preliminary call the agent received suggested Cole had killed both victims, making him the primary suspect.
Jurors also heard an initial 911 call that blamed both Allen and Cole.

“I’ve learned not to be scared of the truth,” Allen said. “Bill Cole did it. I was scared of Bill Cole. I thought he was going to kill me, too.”
Cole denied it.


“I didn’t do it. Why would I?” Cole said. “I had nothing to gain, and I still don’t have anything to gain. I sit in that little old house, a lonely old man. I lost my whole family. No, I didn’t do that.”
Prosecutors pushed back on Allen's credibility during cross-examination, questioning why he went out to buy pizza and headphones after the killings and why he never told anyone what he claimed to have seen.
 
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