Dayton Daily News

Canton firefighte­r’s family protests ruling that her death was a suicide

- By Stephanie Warsmith

Summit County AKRON —

Medical Examiner Lisa Kohler said she ruled Canton firefighte­r Tonya Johnson’s death a suicide because she stepped into rush-hour traffic on state Route 8.

Kohler testified Thursday that Johnson’s action was more dangerous than Russian roulette, which has a 1 in 6 chance of death.

“If the traffic was not as heavy as it is known to be at that hour, and she was crossing a less busy street, I would have considered the idea of an accident,” Kohler said during a hearing in a civil case challengin­g her ruling. “The rate of traffic at shortly after 4 p.m. is significan­t. It is not possible to cross safely. That shows intent to cause harm or death.”

Kohler, who remained steadfast under lengthy and intense questionin­g from Johnson’s family’s attorneys, was the final witness in a three-day hearing that put both Johnson’s life and dramatic death under a microscope.

Following the hearing, Summit County Common Pleas Judge Amy Corrigall Jones gave attorneys for both sides 21 days to file post-hearing briefs. Jones could decide there is enough evidence for a full trial, that there isn’t enough evidence or that the manner of death should be changed.

At stake is $3 million in life insurance that Guardian Life Insurance refused to pay because of the suicide ruling.

Johnson, 43, died while crossing Route 8 in Akron on Feb. 22, 2016. Police said the mother of three crossed the southbound lanes, climbed the concrete divider and was struck by a northbound vehicle.

Kohler ruled on April 18, 2016, that the cause of Johnson’s death was “blunt force trauma to the head” and the manner of death was “suicide.”

Johnson’s family protested Kohler’s ruling, insisting Johnson never expressed suicidal thoughts. They argued Kohler had failed to consider how Johnson had sought a divorce from her husband of eight days and speculated that Johnson may have run across traffic to get away from him after a fight. Two of Johnson’s relatives were on their way to get her in Akron when she was hit.

Johnson’s family filed a lawsuit last February against the medical examiner’s office, the Akron police officers who investigat­ed Johnson’s death and Guardian Life Insurance.

In the first two days of last week’s hearing, several of Johnson’s family members, friends and co-workers testified about Johnson’s life and character and their disbelief that she would end her life. They painted a picture of an ambitious woman who loved her job, her family and God.

On Thursday, the hearing shifted to Johnson’s death, with several witnesses and officers testifying.

Dale White, who was driving the pickup truck that struck Johnson, said he was in the far left northbound lane on Route 8 when he saw a car in front of him swerve to the right. He saw a woman in the road watching this car go by. He locked his brakes and turned his steering wheel to the left, but still struck her.

 ?? AKRON BEACON JOURNAL ?? Summit County Common Pleas Judge Amy Corrigall Jones holds up a photograph of Route 8, where Tonya Johnson was struck and killed by a pickup truck on Feb. 22, 2016.
AKRON BEACON JOURNAL Summit County Common Pleas Judge Amy Corrigall Jones holds up a photograph of Route 8, where Tonya Johnson was struck and killed by a pickup truck on Feb. 22, 2016.

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