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‘I hope those 3 boys haunt you’ Houston judge tells child murderer Brian Coulter who killed girlfriend’s 8-year-old son

April 15, 2024: Judge Kelli Johnson tells child murderer Brian Coulter that the facts of his case are haunting -- some of the most horrific she's had to see and hear. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

HOUSTON – The Houston judge who sent emotionless child killer Brian Coulter to prison for the rest of his life said this case was one of the most “horrific set of facts that I’ve ever had to witness, to listen to and to image.”

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Judge Kelli Johnson told 34-year-old Coulter what he did to 8-year-old Kendrick Lee and his three brothers has haunted her mind and interrupted her safe space.

“How you, Sir, could have done what you did to those children. When you look at them in the face, children that you led to believe were your own kids,” Judge Johnson said.

Kendrick’s oldest brother, who was 15 at the time, called 911 on October 24, 2021 and told the dispatcher that his brother had been dead in their apartment for more than a year. When Harris County deputies got to the home at 3535 Green Crest, they found Kendrick’s three brother -- ages 15, 10 and 7 -- in horrid conditions and they found Kendrick’s decomposing body.

The boys told investigators and testified again in court that Coulter beat Kendrick to death and kept hitting and kicking him even when he was no longer moving. The 7-year-old said he stared at his older brother’s face while Coulter was kicking and hitting him and at some point during the beating, Kendrick stopped blinking.

Kendrick’s cause of death was homicidal violence. The Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences said he suffered multiple blunt force injuries.

After that beating, the brothers were left alone in the apartment for months with Kendrick’s body decaying in another room.

Their mother, Gloria Y. Williams, is charged with injury to a child by omission and tampering with evidence, meaning Kendrick’s body. Williams and Coulter had been together for several years and at some point in the relationship, Coulter started consistently beating the children.

In closing arguments, prosecutors framed Coulter as a spiteful, jealous and angry man who wanted the kids out of sight and out of mind.

“I think about what his kids went through,” Judge Johnson said during sentencing. “I think about all three of them and their injuries. I think about how you can look at each and every one of them and hit them in the face. So much so that in the end, one had to have surgery. And so the courage that they had to have to testify in this case. And I hope they, all three of them remaining will go on and live a very, very healthy, happy life.”

The judge said she was happy to see that Kendrick’s brothers now seem to be living with loving and caring families.

“Now you will leave this court, but you will not leave my mind,” the judge told Coulter.

“And I hope, sir, when you’re in prison, I hope those same boys that have haunted my mind haunt yours.”

Coulter, sporting his ‘Warrior’ tattoo across the front of his neck, sat through it all in his yellow prison garb, never showing any emotion.

He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.


About the Authors
Holly Galvan Posey headshot

Holly joined the KPRC 2 digital team in March 2024, leveraging her eight years of expertise in blogging and digital content to share her passion for Houston. Outside of work, she enjoys exploring the city's vibrant scenes, all while balancing her roles as a wife and mother to two toddlers.

Briana Zamora-Nipper headshot

Briana Zamora-Nipper joined the KPRC 2 digital team in 2019. When she’s not hard at work in the KPRC 2 newsroom, you can find Bri drinking away her hard earned wages at JuiceLand, running around Hermann Park, listening to crime podcasts or ransacking the magazine stand at Barnes & Noble.

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