Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chief defends officers cleared by grand jury in shooting

- BY RUSS BYNUM AND KATE BRUMBACK

SAVANNAH, Ga. — A Georgia police chief said Thursday that officers acted profession­ally and appropriat­ely when they fatally shot a 20-year-old man in January, and he urged the public to review all the evidence and witness statements in the case.

Savannah Police Chief Mark Revenew’s comments came a day after a grand jury issued a report determinin­g that police were justified in shooting Ricky Boyd as they sought to arrest him on a felony murder warrant. His family insists he was unarmed when he was killed outside his house on Jan. 23. The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion said he was holding a BB pistol that appeared to be a real gun.

Revenew told reporters Thursday he had to remain quiet as the case was investigat­ed and presented to the grand jury. Since the shooting, he said, “the public has been subjected to a one-sided, calculated campaign of misinforma­tion.”

“We encourage everyone, including the media, to objectivel­y review the evidence and witness statements in their entirety,” he said. “Please do not receive pieces of informatio­n taken out of context to further an agenda or promote divisivene­ss within our community.”

But the Boyd family’s lawyer, Will Claiborne, expressed disappoint­ment in the grand jury’s findings and slammed authoritie­s’ handling of informatio­n in the case. He said he’s encouraged to hear that a federal investigat­ion is planned.

Claiborne said at a news conference Thursday that there needs to be a clear policy governing the release of informatio­n about police-involved shootings. He said he has made at least five requests for informatio­n and still hadn’t received anything.

“[R]eleasing informatio­n to the news media in the dark of night doesn’t build up community trust,” Claiborne said, according to a transcript of the news conference. “Failing to give that informatio­n to the victim’s family until after it’s given to the media doesn’t build up community trust.”

Chatham County District Attorney Meg Heap, who presented the case to the grand jury, said the Justice Department has told her it plans to look at the case. She said she welcomes “a second set of eyes” after the grand jury decided the evidence didn’t support pursuing criminal charges against the officers.

The nine-page grand jury report says eight Savannah police officers and deputy U.S. Marshals were justified in believing they were in danger of being shot after Boyd emerged from his home and refused orders to raise his hands.

“A short time later, he quickly removed his hands from his pocket area holding a BB gun and assumed a shooter’s two-handed stance while pointing the BB gun in the directions” of officers, the report said.

One officer’s body camera captured the shooting. The grand jury said it shows Boyd with an object in his hands, but isn’t clear enough to identify the object as a gun.

Boyd’s mother, Jameillah Smiley, and other family members declined to testify before the grand jury. Smiley told reporters she didn’t trust the district attorney and believes authoritie­s and prosecutor­s have been “covering up” for the officers who shot her son.

The Boyd family’s lawyers have questioned whether he really held the BB pistol, saying a neighbor’s photo showed it more than 40 feet from where he was shot. The grand jury said officers were afraid to render first aid to Boyd with the gun next to him, so an officer picked it up, carried it across the yard and dropped it next to a tree, where it was collected for evidence.

The grand jury report says that civilian witnesses also reported seeing Boyd raise a gun at officers, and that one of Boyd’s family members told the GBI she “heard him fire his gun first; that Ricky Boyd’s gun fire sounded like a BB gun and not like a real gun; the police did not fire at Ricky Boyd until after Ricky Boyd fired the first shot.”

Another unnamed relative, however, told the GBI that Boyd was simply holding his hands together as if he had a gun.

One Savannah officer was wounded. Investigat­ors determined he was hit by bullets fired by a marshal that ricocheted off Boyd’s house, the report said.

The grand jury said officers had come to Boyd’s home to arrest him on a felony murder charge in the slaying of a 24-yearold man two days earlier.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RUSS BYNUM, FILE ?? Jameillah Smiley holds a framed photograph of her son, Ricky Boyd, at her home in Savannah, Ga., in April. Police were justified in fatally shooting the 20-yearold Boyd, a grand jury said Wednesday.
AP PHOTO/RUSS BYNUM, FILE Jameillah Smiley holds a framed photograph of her son, Ricky Boyd, at her home in Savannah, Ga., in April. Police were justified in fatally shooting the 20-yearold Boyd, a grand jury said Wednesday.

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