When two Michigan boys went to a playground to pass the time, one wouldn’t leave alive. The victim became the perfect target for another child’s rage, after the lessons he learned at home that led him to commit a heinous crime.

Jamarion Lawhorn was 12-years-old when he buried a knife in the sand at a park in Kentwood, waiting for another boy to come out and play. When 9-year-old Connor Verkerke arrived, he didn’t realize it would be his last day. Jamarion unearthed his weapon and stabbed the younger boy several times in the back, releasing the pain from years of abuse with every drive of the knife into this young boy’s body.

Jamarion didn’t know his victim. He just knew that he wanted to hurt someone and get arrested so he could escape the nightmare he called home. Jamarion said that he had endured severe beatings from his parents, including being whipped with an extension cord and treated “like a slave.” According to Jamarion, his stepdad got angry with him the day of the killing, beat him while they were building a bench, and threatened to beat him again later that day.

After killing Connor, Jamarion called the police. He admitted to what he had done and said he wanted to be removed from his awful life at home. All he wanted to do was end his own misery. Investigators had found marks on Jamarion’s legs — evidence of repeated abuse. The lead Kentwood police detective in the case described the home where Jamarion lived with his mom, stepdad, and three siblings as “deplorable.”
Police found beer cans all over, flies, mouse droppings, electrical problems, and drywall falling from the bathroom. They also found a straw with cocaine residue. CPS worker Paula Leonard found mold in the Lawhorn home, rotted food, filth, backed up sinks, and no edible food in the refrigerator. There were dirty clothes and debris on the floor of Jamarion’s bedroom and no sheets on his bed. His mattress was covered with bugs.

Anita Lawhorn and Bernard Harrold were both sentenced to one year in jail and five years probation for third-degree child abuse involving Jamarion Lawhorn. Because they have other children, their sentences were split. Lawhorn was ordered to serve 150 days in jail before beginning her probation, and Harrold will serve 150 days two weeks after Lawhorn is released. They will both serve the remainder of their sentences at some point after probation and were also ordered to complete parenting classes.
Defense attorney Charles Boekeloo contends Jamarion was driven to legal insanity by a lifetime of abuse that continued up until that day. “We have a situation that’s just a tragedy all the way around,” Boekeloo told the jury in his closing argument. “There isn’t a good, optimistic feeling that’s come from this case. Everything’s been depressing. But you’ve only had to experience it for four days. Jamarion Lawhorn has experienced it his whole life.”


