Bardstown
'Bombshell' testimony, deleted calls: Takeaways from Day 2 of Steve Lawson's trial in Crystal Rogers case
Jurors heard new testimony and details about Steve Lawson's phone as the first trial in Crystal Rogers’ death continued Wednesday.
Author: Joseph Garcia
Published: 5:57 PM EDT May 28, 2025
Updated: 6:51 PM EDT May 28, 2025
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. — A 15-person jury returned to a Bowling Green courtroom Wednesday to
hear more testimony in the first trial of the Crystal Rogers case.
Steve Lawson is charged with conspiracy to murder and tampering with physical evidence in the Bardstown mother's 2015 disappearance.
Here's a quick recap of what happened and the biggest takeaways from the second day of Lawson's trial.
TONIGHT ON WHAS11+: Tune in at 9:30 p.m. ET every night for special trial coverage in the Crystal Rogers case with Shay McAlister, Isaiah Kim-Martinez and Doug Proffitt, as well as insight from WHAS11 legal analyst Nick Mudd.
1 . Houck family under investigation
Within the first hour of testimony, Prosecutor Shane Young said two members of Brooks Houck’s family are still under investigation as co-conspirators in Rogers’ case: his mother, Rosemary, and brother, Nick.
Nick Houck is a former Bardstown Police officer who had been fired from the department for his involvement in the investigation. He called his brother during a 2015 police interview,
advising Brooks to end the conversation.
Kentucky State Police later questioned Nick about the call and Rogers’ disappearance. He also agreed to take a polygraph, which he failed.
This isn’t the first time Nick’s name has been brought up in the investigation since then.
During Brooks Houck’s arraignment, Young said prosecutors purchased a rifle from Nick Houck that is
believed to have been used to kill Rogers’ father, Tommy Ballard. He also claimed Nick sold it to them using a fake name.
Rosemary Houck owns the Houck family’s farm, a 245-acre property on Paschal Ballard Lane, which is located about nine miles south of downtown Bardstown.
The farm is the last place Rogers was seen alive on July 3, 2015, according to police. It’s been
searched several times for evidence.
Credit: WHAS11 News
Rosemary Houck walks inside the courtroom, an hour ahead of the hearing for her son, Brooks. | Feb. 8, 2024
Young has also previously accused Rosemary, and several other members of the Houck family, of secretly recording grand jury proceedings to “get their story straight.”
He said the jury was determining Houck’s initial bond and charges.
Neither Nick nor Rosemary Houck have been arrested or charged in connection with Rogers’ disappearance or death.
2. Witness: ‘I would be next if I said anything.’
Several witnesses testified about the strange behavior Lawson exhibited around the time Rogers disappeared, including a woman named Elizabeth Chesser. Her mom was previously married to Steve Lawson.
She said they were watching a documentary on Rogers' disappearance and heard the phone call between Houck and Lawson play during the police interview.
She said they recognized Lawson's voice, adding that it was the first time they ever talked about the case.
Chesser testified that Lawson left his ex-wife Tammy because "she knew he had committed murder and she was going to tell on him."
“That’s not something you forget,” she said.
Credit: Sydney Young
Elizabeth Chesser testifies during Day 2 of Steve Lawson's trial in the Crystal Rogers case. | May 28, 2025
Lawson's attorney, Daren Wolff, asked her why she didn't report to police that she had been told Lawson committed murder, calling her statement a "bombshell."
Chesser explained she was afraid if she did, "I would be next if I said anything."
3. Steve Lawson’s cell phone
A crucial piece of evidence for the prosecution has been Steve Lawson's cell phone.
Jurors heard from multiple experts who were able to track the phone's general location around the time Rogers' disappeared.
One expert testified that police found several phone calls had been deleted between July 3 and July 9, 2015. More than one of those calls were between Lawson and Brooks Houck.
Melissa Dover, a crime and intelligence analyst with the Elizabethtown Police Department, said one report found multiple calls the night Rogers disappeared between Steve Lawson, Joseph Lawson and Steve's ex-wife Tammy Lawson.
Credit: Sydney Young
Steve Lawson sits between his defense attorneys as new witnesses testify during Day 2 of his trial in the Crystal Rogers case. | May 28, 2025
The report showed Joseph Lawson called Tammy and Steve Lawson multiple times the night Rogers disappeared, but many went to voicemail.
Steve Lawson eventually called his son around 12:01 a.m. on July 4, 2015 with the call lasting a few seconds.
Joseph Lawson called Steve Lawson back a few minutes later and they spoke for just under 3 minutes.
Steve Lawson then called Brooks Houck around 12:07 a.m. for around 15 seconds.
Joseph Lawson then called Steve Lawson and they spoke for around 3 minutes and 45 seconds just after 1 a.m. that night.
Tammy Lawson then called Steve Lawson just before 2 a.m. and they spoke for more than 8 minutes.
Prosecutor Shane Young has previously said he believes Tammy, who has since passed away, had knowledge of Rogers’ death and was involved in the plot to kill her. He also believes she was there on the Bluegrass Parkway when the Lawsons were moving Rogers’ car.
The jury later heard portions of Steve Lawson's 2023 grand jury testimony in which his story about the brief late-night phone call to Houck changed.
At first he said the call was to let Houck know he had wrapped up work for the day and admitted to ending up on the Bluegrass Parkway after the call due to some alleged altercation that had occurred.
He later said it was to let him know that Rogers' car had been moved. During his September 2023 testimony, Lawson explained Houck had asked him to move the car, which he agreed to do.
"[Houck] said he wanted his wife gone," Lawson told investigators at the time. "To me, it means he wanted her deceased."
The jury returns to court at 8:30 a.m. CT on Thursday. WHAS11 will again provide updates throughout the day.
TONIGHT ON WHAS11+: Tune in at 9:30 p.m. ET for special trial coverage in the Crystal Rogers case with Shay McAlister, Isaiah Kim-Martinez and Doug Proffitt, as well as insight from WHAS11 legal analyst Nick Mudd.