Mocking the Court, a Teen Thought It Was a Game — Then the Judge Ruled

A Quiet Town Shaken
On the morning of October 15th, Cedar Falls, Iowa, felt ordinary. Kids rode bikes, neighbors chatted over fences,

and crime rarely went beyond petty theft at Murphy’s General Store. But that Thursday would fracture the town’s sense

of safety and spark a debate about youth accountability that extended far beyond county lines.

Twelve-year-old Ethan Morales wasn’t supposed to make headlines. He should have been in seventh-grade math class,

grumbling over algebra like any other student. Instead, he sat in Courtroom 3B of the Black Hawk County Courthouse.

His feet barely touched the floor, and a smirk on his face would soon become infamous statewide.

The courtroom was a relic—wood-paneled walls absorbing decades of testimonies and verdicts.

Fluorescent lights hummed above as a packed gallery watched. News crews waited outside, cameras ready.

But it wasn’t just the crime that drew attention. It was Ethan’s attitude—a child disconnected from the gravity of his actions, treating his trial as an inconvenience.

The Crime That Shocked a Community

Three weeks earlier, seventy-three-year-old Harold Kensington followed his routine: dinner at six, news at six-thirty,

a chapter of a mystery novel, then bed by nine. The retired postal worker had lived alone for decades on

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