Teen hockey player killed by hail of bullets on highway as he and father drove home from game: Cops

Garrett Jordan and Colin Brown

Left: Garrett Jordan. Right: Colin Brown (St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department).

Authorities in Missouri charged one man with murder and are expected to make additional arrests in the death of a 16-year-old hockey player, who along with his father was in the wrong place at the wrong time when their vehicle was struck by gunshots as they drove down the highway while returning home from a game.

The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department on Thursday arrested 26-year-old Garrett Jordan in the death of teen hockey player Colin Brown. Colin and his father, retired Illinois State Police Lt. Col. Calvin Brown, drove along Interstate 55 in St. Louis around 10:30 p.m. on Nov. 23, when a stray bullet entered the SUV, striking Colin in the neck, police said. Brown drove his son to the area of 4th and Walnut where he met up with police and paramedics, who rushed Colin to the hospital. Colin died a couple days later.

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According to a probable cause arrest affidavit, detectives recovered more than 20 cartridge casings from a handgun and a rifle. The targeted victim said he was entering the highway when his car was shot. He later told detectives he had just left a home on Minnesota Avenue — which runs parallel to I-55 — moments before his car was shot. He was uninjured.

A witness told cops an Audi is often parked outside the Minnesota Avenue address where the targeted victim had been visiting. Surveillance video allegedly shows the Audi following the man’s car from the home to the highway, and then back to the Minnesota Avenue home. Jordan lives at the home. Local cops, with the FBI’s help, were able to track historical data from Jordan’s phone that showed him traveling from the home to the highway and back at the time of the shooting, according to the affidavit.

In an interview with detectives, Jordan acknowledged he owned the phone, which placed him in the Audi. Prosecutors on Friday charged Jordan with a slew of crimes, including first-degree murder, armed criminal action and unlawful use of a weapon.

“What happened to Colin is nothing short of a tragedy and should never have happened,” St. Louis police Chief Robert J. Tracy said at a press conference Friday. “Despite the arrest and charges it won’t bring Colin back. As a father myself I pray that this can bring a sense of relief for Colin’s family.”

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