Father Of Music Group Members Pleads Guilty
With scratches on his face from a car crash, Keith Brown, 55, entered his plea to three felony counts in Fourth District Court.
“He is terribly remorseful for what has happened and for what he has put his family through,” defense attorney Steven Shapiro said after the hearing. “He recognizes that this is the next step in the long road to trying to accept responsibility for something terrible that he did a long time ago.”
Dressed in dark slacks and a grey overcoat, Brown appeared in court with his sister-in-law by his side.
His response to the judge who asked for his plea on each charge was a barely audible, “guilty.”
He did not speak further during the hearing and declined to answer questions from reporters afterward.
Brown chose to enter the plea to bring a quick resolution to the case and did not want to “exacerbate the harm” by dragging out the proceedings, Shapiro said.
Utah County prosecutors charged Brown with one first-degree felony count of sodomy on a child and two second-degree felony counts of sexual abuse of a child.
Brown could face a sentence of up to life in prison on the first-degree felony and up to 15 years each on the second-degree felonies.
Brown’s three daughters and two sons are part of the classical piano group The 5 Browns, whose albums have topped the classical music charts and who have appeared on “Oprah” and other shows. The group also has been profiled by “60 Minutes.”
Keith Brown appeared in court just three days after he and his wife were hurt in a crash that saw his Porsche plunge from a mountain road into a 300-foot canyon in Utah.
Both parents survived the crash that left the car mangled and unrecognizable.
The records filed Feb. 10 in the abuse case don’t identify any victim by name or indicate the relationship between Keith Brown and the alleged victims.
However, Kimball Thomson, a spokesman for The 5 Browns, said the charges involve Brown’s daughters and group members Desirae, 32, Deondra, 30, and Melody, 26. He declined to release further information on the women.
The AP does not generally identify people who say they were sexually abused, but the Brown women have chosen to be identified and are cooperating with police, Thomson said.
None of the women were in court on Thursday, but after the hearing Thomson said they were satisfied with the plea.
Thomson said the Brown children severed their professional relationship with Keith Brown in October of 2008. He was once the manager of The 5 Browns but now has no connection, Thomson said.
Court documents state the allegations stem from separate occasions between November 1990 and October 1992, November 1990 and November 1992, and March 1997 and March 1998 in Utah County.
There are no statutes of limitation in Utah that prevent prosecutors from filing such sex crime charges.
Utah County prosecutor David Sturgill said Lone Peak police brought the case to his office last year for screening.
Shapiro couldn’t say exactly when Brown first spoke to police, but said the father first went to his Mormon church leader to confess.
Sturgill wouldn’t comment further on the remarks.
Police were first contacted by Brown’s daughters.
“I think this deal was good for both sides,” Sturgill said. “This is something the victims wanted resolved, and I think the plea bargain is going to satisfy their needs.”
Brown and Lisa Brown, 54, the mother of the group members, were hospitalized after the Valentine’s Day crash in Little Cottonwood Canyon on the east side of the Salt Lake valley.
The Browns were initially knocked unconscious, but Keith Brown woke and was able to call 911 from a cell phone.
The cause of the crash remained under investigation, although Unified Police Lt. Justin Hoyal said speed appeared to be a factor.
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