Lawyer change approved in Jeannette murder, arson case | TribLIVE.com
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Lawyer change approved in Jeannette murder, arson case

Rich Cholodofsky
| Tuesday, November 9, 2021 5:00 p.m.
Tribune-Review
Brian Eric Rendon arrives at his preliminary hearing in 2018. He is accused of setting a fire in Jeannette that killed a woman and injured her granddaughter.

A Jeannette man awaiting trial on homicide and arson charges will have new lawyers.

Westmoreland County Public Defender Wayne McGrew said he, along with assistant Jennifer DeFlitch, will serve as primary attorneys for Brian Rendon as he continues to weigh a potential plea deal or going to trial next year on allegations he set fire to a Jeannette row house that killed one resident and injured another in 2018.

Assistant Public Defender Jack Manderino represented Rendon in most court hearings since his arrest, including two appearances last week before Common Pleas Judge Meagan Bilik-DeFazio.

McGrew declined to discuss specifics about the lawyer switch.

“It’s about case management in the office,” McGrew said.

DeFlitch previously was assigned to Rendon’s case in connection with an unrelated arson allegation at his home two days before the fatal fire. She will serve as the lead attorney in the murder case and be assisted by McGrew, he said.

Police contend Rendon, 37, on April 9, 2018, set the fire that destroyed a group row homes on South Seventh Street. Shirley Kocherhans, 87, was found dead inside her house. A woman who lived with her was injured. About a dozen residents were left homeless.

In all, Rendon was charged with 23 counts, including homicide, second-degree murder, third-degree murder, arson and multiple charges of reckless endangerment.

He faces a potential sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole if convicted of second-degree murder. Manderino said last week a potential plea deal being considered by Rendon would spare him from a life sentence. Rendon has yet to accept that deal.

In court Tuesday, Rendon’s new lawyers said a final decision on accepting a plea deal will be reached in December. A potential trial would begin in January, the judge said.


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