Ohio sheriff's deputy charged with murder for shooting Black man in the
back
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[December 03, 2021]
By Brad Brooks
(Reuters) - A former sheriff's deputy in
Columbus, Ohio, was charged with murder on Thursday in the December 2020
shooting death of a 23-year-old Black man, who was shot in his back five
times as he entered his home.
Former Franklin County Sheriff's Deputy Jason Meade, 44, who is white
and retired following the shooting, faces two counts of murder and one
count of reckless homicide for killing Casey Goodson, according to the
grand jury indictment filed in Franklin County court.
The killing last year sparked protests amid a wave of racial justice
demonstrations that called for accountability for law enforcement
officers who gun down Black men in the United States.
Special prosecutors Gary Shroyer and H. Tim Merkle said in a written
statement that the charges followed an investigation by the Columbus
police department, an FBI corruption and civil rights squad, and the
Department of Justice Office of Inspector General.
Meade turned himself in on Thursday and will have his first appearance
in Franklin County Municipal Court on Friday, his attorney, Mark
Collins, said in an emailed statement. He will plead not guilty.
Goodson was shot in his back five times and was hit once in his buttock
by bullets, according to the coroner's report released in March, which
ruled the death a homicide.
More details about the shooting remain murky. Meade was not wearing a
body camera and there are no known eye witnesses to the incident.
Meade was working for a U.S. Marshals Service task force at the time of
the Dec. 4, 2020, shooting. He was helping search for a fugitive, who
was never captured, when he saw Goodson in the Northland neighborhood of
Columbus.
Meade's attorney Collins said in his Thursday statement that Goodson was
seen by his client erratically waving a gun around as Goodson drove a
car, and that he had pointed the weapon at Meade.
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A placard reading "Convict Jason Meade of Murder" is pictured as
people protest in reaction to the death of Casey Goodson, a
23-year-old Black man who was killed by police as he entered his
home, in Columbus, Ohio, U.S., December 11, 2020. REUTERS/Seth
Herald/File Photo
The deputy gave a detailed account of what was happening to other
members of the fugitive task force team via radio, Collins said. Fellow
officers arrived to provide backup, but none witnessed the shooting.
Meade followed Goodson as he made his way home. He fired on Goodson
after the suspect raised his weapon with his right hand and pointed it
toward Meade, according to Collins.
But Sean Walton, a lawyer for Goodson's family, said
by phone that those details amounted to an "implausible story"
manufactured by Meade, who he said was desperate to escape
conviction.
Walton said Goodson had no criminal record and there had never been
any reports of him behaving in any sort of erratic way with his gun.
"Meade's story makes no sense," Walton said. "Casey was a concealed
carry permit holder because he believed in following the law, and he
cherished his right to bear arms."
Goodson's family has said that he was returning home from a dentist
appointment with three sandwiches in his hand when he was shot by
Meade.
Goodson's mother, Tamala Payne, said in media interviews last year
that her son was armed at the time of the shooting, and confirmed
that he had a concealed carry license.
During a press conference on Thursday, Payne said she was
"overwhelmed with joy" following Meade's indictment.
The family on Thursday filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against
Meade and Franklin County in U.S. District Court in Columbus, Walton
said.
Franklin County Sheriff Dallas Baldwin said in a statement after the
indictment was announced that everyone is presumed innocent until
proven guilty, but that he was calling on his staff to raise
standards and "determine how this agency can best learn from this
tragedy."
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas; Edited by Colleen
Jenkins and Daniel Wallis)
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