A person in a red outfit sits in a room with glass doors, viewed through a screen labeled "CF-MWR-CR1".
Brian Crossman Jr. appears remotely as he is arraigned on three aggravated murder charges in Rutland County Superior criminal court on Thursday, Oct. 3. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

RUTLAND โ€” A Granville, New York, man charged with killing three family members in Pawlet last month appeared via video from a Rutland jail Thursday afternoon to face arraignment on three charges of aggravated murder.

Brian Crossman Jr., 22, appeared from a jail conference room in red prison garb, his head bowed and hands clasped throughout much of the three-minute proceeding in Rutland County Superior criminal court. He said nothing as his lawyer entered not guilty pleas on his behalf. 

According to charging documents, Crossman fatally shot his father, 46-year-old Brian Crossman Sr.; his stepmother, 41-year-old Erica (Pawlusiak) Crossman; and his stepbrother, 13-year-old Colin Taft.

Vermont State Police said the killings took place early on the morning of Sept. 15 inside a family home on Route 133 in Pawlet that Brian Crossman Sr., shared with his wife and stepson.

The younger Crossman was arrested Sept. 20 by New York State Police and has been held in custody since. He agreed to waive extradition to Vermont during a court appearance last week in Warren County, New York.

At the arraignment, Judge Cortland Corsones granted a request by Rutland County Stateโ€™s Attorney Ian Sullivan to hold Crossman in jail without bail at least until another hearing in the case is held.

Crossmanโ€™s actions in committing the three killings showed a โ€œsustained and vicious form of violence against his victims,โ€ Sullivan told the judge.

A group of journalists with cameras and microphones surround a man in a suit in a hallway.
Rutland County State’s Attorney Ian Sullivan speaks with reporters after Brian Crossman Jr. was arraigned on three aggravated murder charges in Rutland County Superior criminal court on Thursday, October 3. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Attorney Christopher Davis, representing Crossman, did not contest the prosecutorโ€™s request to hold his client without bail.

Corsones called for a hearing to be set soon to consider the weight of the evidence in the case and determine if Crossman will remain jailed while the case against him is pending.

Several family members of the victims attended the hearing Thursday and declined comment following the proceeding  

Each charge of aggravated murder carries the possibility of life behind bars, without the possibility of parole.

According to charging documents, the younger Crossmanโ€™s alleged inconsistent statements as well as โ€œsignificant evidenceโ€ gathered from digital evidence and other interviews, led to his arrest

Family members, according to the court filings, had also raised concerns about his mental health. Charging documents stated that Brian Crossman Jr.โ€™s mother, who lives in Granville, told investigators she has sought inpatient mental health care for him in the past.

His mother told investigators that about two years ago, she noticed his โ€œbehavior beginning to escalate,โ€ the court filings stated.ย  โ€œThese behaviors included him talking to himself in a way to suggest he was having a conversation with himself in his own mind.โ€

โ€œCrossman Jr.’s mental stability seemed to ebb and flow with peaks and valleys,โ€ a state police investigator wrote. โ€œHe was described as being very erratic one moment and then seeming to โ€˜come out of itโ€™ a short time later.โ€

According to Vermont State Police, Crossman called police a little before 4 a.m. on Sept. 15 reporting that he had found the bodies of three of his family members dead from shotgun wounds inside their home in Pawlet. 

He met with police in the parking lot of the Wells Village School soon after making the call, and an arriving trooper found him wearing bloodstained clothing, the documents stated. 

The younger Crossman had been staying with his father that weekend as his mother, who he lives with in Granville, had gone away for a few days. He told investigators he had discovered the bodies after having gone out for a walk, according to a police affidavit filed in the case.

Crossman was taken to the state police barracks in Rutland where evidence was collected, including his cellphone, the charging documents stated. 

โ€œDetectives attempted to interview Crossman Jr.,โ€ the documents added. โ€œCrossman Jr. advised he did not want to speak to investigators without a lawyer present. No questions were asked of Crossman Jr.โ€ 

Questions on custody

In the days following the murders, Vermont State Police provided little public information regarding their investigation beyond confirming three people were killed. On Sept. 17, a brief update from state police provided the names of the victims and said no one was in custody. There was no mention made of a suspect, leaving residents of the small southern Rutland County town on edge.

Maj. Dan Trudeau, head of the state police criminal division, said in an interview last week that Crossman left the barracks later on Sept.. 15, the day of the killings, with his mother before any criminal charges were brought.

โ€œWe had him detained for a period of time and we were conducting the investigation, trying to get some more information, but ultimately at the end of the day we didnโ€™t feel like we were at a point where we could hold him any longer and not charge him,โ€ Trudeau said.

A courtroom scene with two men in suits; one stands, and one sits at a table with papers. A video call is displayed on a monitor showing a person in red.
Brian Crossman Jr. is arraigned on three aggravated murder charges in Rutland County Superior criminal court on Thursday, October 3. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

โ€œWe donโ€™t have to like that, but at the end of the day, I tell everybody, I tell my people, friends of mine, and the media, itโ€™s not what you think, itโ€™s what you can prove,โ€ Trudeau said. โ€œSometimes it takes a little more digging before you have proof.โ€ 

According to charging documents filed on Sept. 20, the Glens Falls (New York) Police Department was called to the Glens Falls Hospital โ€œto assist with a mental health admissionโ€ for Crossman late on the night of Sept. 15.

โ€œBrian walked into the Hospital on his own and was checked in and later triaged by hospital staff,โ€ the filing stated. 

On Sept. 20, Corsones, the Rutland judge, approved the arrest warrant for Crossman on the three murder counts in Vermont, court records show.

โ€œI know he was in a hospital in Glens Falls,โ€ Trudeau said of Crossman, adding that on Sept. 20, police โ€œhad an โ€œunderstanding that he was probably going to be discharged that day.โ€

Asked if Crossmanโ€™s discharge on Sept. 20 prompted police to act that day to make the arrest, Trudeau said that wasnโ€™t necessarily the case. 

โ€œThe relief that heโ€™s in a facility, wherever it was, was comforting to us, but it really comes down to lucky timing,โ€ he said

โ€œJust because you have an inkling that a personโ€™s going to get out of the hospital at a certain time frame doesnโ€™t really mean they are going to,โ€ Trudeau added. โ€œWeโ€™re still moving and trying to get a chargeable offense in an affidavit approved by a judge from the time he left Rutland.โ€

Victims remembered

Services from Erica and Brian Crossman Sr. as well as Colin Taft were held last Friday and over the weekend. 

Erica Crossman was born in Rutland and graduated from Fair Haven Union High School in 2002, according to her obituary. She married Brian Crossman Sr. in June.

She was an employee of Green Mountain Power, holding various positions in her 20 years working there. โ€œShe spent her free time hunting, fishing, and tending to her flowers,โ€ the obituary added.

Brian Crossman Sr. was also a longtime employee at Green Mountain Power, serving as a lineworker. In Pawlet, he was a member of the townโ€™s selectboard. 

โ€œBrian Crossman was a friend and neighbor, a hardworking community member who just this year stepped up to join the Pawlet Selectboard,โ€ the Selectboard wrote in a statement following his death.

Green Mountain Power issued a statement following the deaths of Erica and Brian Crossman Sr. 

โ€œWe are devastated by this unimaginable loss,โ€ the statement read. 

โ€œErica and Brian were beloved members of our team, and their deaths have left us all in shock and grief,โ€ the statement added. โ€œThey were more than just colleagues; they were integral parts of GMP, bringing their unique talents, kindness, and positive energy to everything they did.โ€

Taft, according to his obituary, enjoyed spending time outdoors and with his family, described as living in and near Springfield, Vt., where services were held, as well as in Rutland County. 

โ€œFishing was one of his favorite activities along with hunting, going to the racetrack and working on a race car with his dad,โ€ the obituary stated. โ€œHe adored his older brother, Luke, and cherished any time they got to spend together.โ€

VTDigger's criminal justice reporter.