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Tag: Brooks' Sandwich House

  • Jurors deliberate after closing arguments in Brooks Sandwich House murder case

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    Scott Brooks and David Brooks are twins who took over their father’s business, Brooks’ Sandwich House.

    Scott Brooks and David Brooks are twins who took over their father’s business, Brooks’ Sandwich House.

    CharlotteFive

    For six years, David Brooks has wondered if the men accused of killing his twin, Scott, will face justice.

    On Monday, Brooks and his family watched attorneys make closing arguments in Mecklenburg County Superior Court — moving jurors one step closer to deciding if Terry Connor and Steven Staples are guilty of shooting and killing Scott Brooks, 61, at his family’s restaurant, Brooks Sandwich House, on Dec. 9, 2019.

    “It’s been long and lengthy, but I’m glad we’re probably coming to a close,” Brooks said in an interview with The Charlotte Observer Monday.

    An assistant district attorney and two defense attorneys representing Connor and Staples gave closing arguments, hoping to sway 12 jurors and three alternates on five potential charges. The charges include first-degree murder, robbery with a firearm, conspiracy to commit robbery with a firearm, kidnapping and possession of a firearm by a felon. Connor and Staples both pleaded not guilty.

    Men watched, planned killing, prosecutor says

    The state had no eyewitness testimony and surveillance footage only showing two masked people robbing and shooting Scott Brooks at the restaurant. Assistant DA Nikki Robinson had to not only place Connor and Staples at the scene the night of the crime, but prove they were the ones who committed the crime.

    Robinson focused on phone data. She said phone numbers belonging to Connor and Staples at the time of the shooting pinged on towers nearby. She said they pinged on the night of the crime as well as a few days before — when she accused them of staking out the location and planning out the robbery. The phones also pinged at homes she said matched where the two men lived.

    Additionally, Robinson said, no one has testified to say the men were anywhere else the night of the shooting.

    The two men, she said, picked the Brooks brothers’ restaurant because it is a cash-only business and within walking distance from Connor’s home. Robinson showed video surveillance from the night of the shooting.

    The footage showed two people masked at 4:32 a.m. approaching the restaurant. Brooks had just pulled up in his blue Infiniti to begin prepping the restaurant for opening. Within a few minutes, the men approached Brooks, and took him inside the restaurant through the back side door. Robinson said they knew to do this because they watched and planned ahead.

    Footage from inside showed the men taking money from Brooks’ pockets. At one point, Brooks moves and the two people fire four times. Robinson said the men hit Brooks three times after Brooks shot at them and missed, hitting a radiator instead.

    The men ran out at 4:43 a.m., leaving Brooks “moaning for help” and dying, Robinson said. A 911 call went out two minutes later.

    Robinson also cited testimony from a woman who had a child with Connor, Keleasta Smith. Robinson said Smith admitted to police that Connor killed Brooks and got rid of the weapon.

    Defense closing arguments

    But defense attorneys Kenneth Snow and Laura Baker tried to poke holes in the state’s witnesses and evidence. Snow pointed to Smith being an unreliable witness. She lied multiple times to police during interviews, Snow said, and couldn’t be trusted.

    Baker took issue with the state’s argument that the phone data placed the two men at the scene of the crime. The data can only show someone’s approximate location, she said.

    And because there’s no eyewitness testimony, video surveillance only showing two masked men, and no fingerprints or DNA evidence, there’s nothing that proves Connor and Staples are responsible, both attorneys said.

    Both also said the state brought out “props” of unrelated evidence — guns and costume masks not used in the crime but found at their homes — to scare the jurors into a guilty verdict.

    “Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades. Not in this courtroom,” Baker said. “Close is not guilty.”

    After all three attorneys finished, Judge Louis A. Trosch Jr. sent the jury out for deliberation.

    Asked how he felt about the chances of a guilty verdict, David Brooks said he couldn’t be sure.

    “But the jury’s taking a working lunch,” Brooks said. “So maybe that’s an indication it’s not gonna take too long.”

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    Jeff A. Chamer

    The Charlotte Observer

    Jeff A. Chamer is a breaking news reporter for the Charlotte Observer. He’s lived a few places, but mainly in Michigan where he grew up. Before joining the Observer, Jeff covered K-12 and higher education at the Worcester Telegram & Gazette in Massachusetts.

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  • Court testimony begins in killing of Brooks Sandwich House co-owner in Charlotte

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    Scott Brooks and David Brooks, twins who took over their father’s business, Brooks Sandwich House.

    Scott Brooks and David Brooks, twins who took over their father’s business, Brooks Sandwich House.

    CharlotteFive

    Two men accused of killing a beloved NoDa sandwich shop owner in 2019 ambushed him and then shot him during a robbery after he made an attempt to defend himself, a prosecutor said Friday during opening arguments in their trial.

    Terry Conner and Steven Staples face a jury trial in Mecklenburg County Superior Court in the killing of Brooks Sandwich House co-owner Scott Brooks on Dec. 9, 2019.

    Brooks, 61, co-owned the restaurant with his twin brother. Like the twins, Conner and Staples “also worked like brothers,” Assistant District Attorney Heidi Perlman told the jury — but in a less noble business.

    She said they “ambushed” Brooks from both sides outside the sandwich shop early that morning as he prepared to get to work, then took his wallet and cash. Prepared with hoods, masks and gloves, they shot and killed him before fleeing, she said.

    Brooks carried a small gun in his front right pocket, which he had tried to defend himself with, she said. Then he was shot.

    Victim’s brother testifies

    The other Brooks twin, David Brooks, shared their special bond with jurors. They had taken over the restaurant that their father started back in 1973, when NoDa was just north Charlotte. They split the work with one manning the register and the other cooking, and they served burgers “the old way,” or Carolina style with mustard, chili and onions.

    The neighborhood had changed and grown, but not the food, David Brooks said.

    The brothers had their special way of talking to each other and even knew what the other was thinking, he said.

    “I miss that so bad,” he said Friday.

    Defense attorney Kenneth Snow predicted to jurors that prosecutors would rely heavily on a star witness, a woman who had Conner’s child. Earlier, Perlman had said that DNA evidence traced bullet projectiles to her.

    “Without her, there would be no case,” Snow told the jury, reminding them that the burden of proof was on the state.

    Staples’ defense attorney, Laura Baker, also got an early start trying to poke holes in the prosecution.

    “The state is not going to have a murder weapon to show you,” she said.

    A 911 custodian at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, an officer who responded and a neighbor who heard gunshots also testified Friday.

    “That’s one of the owners of Brooks,” that officer, Todd Munn, told others on scene in body camera footage that the jury saw.

    Mun had worked in that division, Eastway, for years. He recognized Brooks as soon as he walked up, he said, since they had spoken before and since he knew Brooks was often at the shop early in the morning to prep for the breakfast crowd.

    The trial is expected to take weeks. Its schedule could be affected by Thanksgiving, too.

    Ryan Oehrli covers criminal justice in the Charlotte region for The Charlotte Observer. His work is produced with financial support from the nonprofit The Just Trust. The Observer maintains full editorial control of its journalism.

    This story was originally published November 7, 2025 at 6:50 PM.

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    Ryan Oehrli

    The Charlotte Observer

    Ryan Oehrli writes about criminal justice for The Charlotte Observer. His reporting has delved into police misconduct, jail and prison deaths, the state’s pardon system and more. He was also part of a team of Pulitzer finalists who covered Hurricane Helene. A North Carolina native, he grew up in Beaufort County.
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  • ‘Time for justice’: Brooks’ will close during trial in the death of Scott Brooks

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    Scott Brooks and David Brooks of Brooks’ Sandwich House in NoDa in 2018.

    Scott Brooks and David Brooks of Brooks’ Sandwich House in NoDa in 2018.

    CharlotteFive

    Almost six years after the tragic death of Brooks’ Sandwich House co-owner Scott Brooks, a trial date has been set.

    The restaurant will close during the trial, Scott’s twin brother and co-owner David Brooks announced via Facebook on Wednesday, October 1.

    “The last almost six years have felt frozen in grief since the death of my twin, Scott. The time for justice has finally come,” David said in an open letter addressed to friends, family, customers, neighbors and the community.

    In December 2019, 61-year-old Scott Brooks was shot and killed as he attempted to open Brooks’ Sandwich House for the day. Terry Connor and Steven Staples were charged with murder and pled not guilty in 2022.

    Hundreds of people gathered to mourn Scott Brooks in 2019 after he was killed outside his and his brother David’s longtime Charlotte restaurant, Brooks’ Sandwich House.
    Hundreds of people gathered to mourn Scott Brooks in 2019 after he was killed outside his and his brother David’s longtime Charlotte restaurant, Brooks’ Sandwich House. Xavier Tianyang Wang xwang@mcclatchy.com

    The restaurant was opened in 1973 by Scott and David’s father. The twins didn’t always want to go into the restaurant business; David considered banking and Scott, who was 5 minutes older, went to law school for a brief stint, they told CharlotteFive in 2018. The family-run business has continued with the next generation, with David’s children, Lauren and Teal, also working there. The restaurant continues to honor Scott’s memory with his trademark saying: “Too blessed to be stressed.”

    Trial for the death of Scott Brooks

    The trial is scheduled to begin on Oct. 27 and is expected last about two weeks, David said. The restaurant will be closed during this time. “I want to speak for my brother and make sure justice is served.”

    More details about Scott’s trial will be announced next week, and David said he will share more once he receives additional information from the district attorney.

    He thanked the community for its continued support and put out another request: “I welcome anyone from the community to come to the courthouse and stand with us during this time. It has been far too long, and your presence would mean everything to me and my family.”

    Scott Brooks and David Brooks with their father.
    Scott Brooks and David Brooks with their father. Alex Cason CharlotteFive

    Brooks’ Sandwich House

    Location: 2710 N. Brevard St., Charlotte, NC 28205

    Menu

    Cuisine: American, burgers

    Instagram: @brookssandwichhouse

    In the Spotlight: Ongoing, in-depth coverage from The Charlotte Observer on the issues that matter most to Charlotteans.

    This story was originally published October 1, 2025 at 5:28 PM.

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    Melissa Oyler

    The Charlotte Observer

    Melissa Oyler is the editor of CharlotteFive. When she’s not writing or editing, you’ll find her running, practicing hot yoga or snuggling with her rescue dogs, X and Charlie. Find her on Instagram or X: @melissaoyler.
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