Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Officer fired after fatal shooting

Official cites actions before and after killing in Ohio capital

- FARNOUSH AMIRI Farnoush Amiri is a corps member for The Associated Press/ Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in local newsrooms to report on undercover­ed issues

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A white Ohio police officer was fired Monday after body camera footage showed him fatally shooting 47-year-old Andre Hill — a Black man who was holding a cellphone — and refusing to administer first aid for several minutes.

Columbus police officer Adam Coy was fired hours after a hearing was held to determine his employment, Columbus Public Safety Director Ned Pettus Jr. said in a statement.

“The actions of Adam Coy do not live up to the oath of a Columbus Police officer, or the standards we, and the community, demand of our officers,” the statement read. “The shooting of Andre Hill is a tragedy for all who loved him in addition to the community and our Division of Police.”

Coy remains under criminal investigat­ion for last week’s shooting.

The decision came after Pettus concluded a hearing to determine whether the actions taken by Coy in the moments before and after the fatal shooting of Hill on Dec. 22 were justified. The public safety director upheld the recommenda­tion of Police Chief Thomas Quinlan, who made a video statement Christmas Eve, saying he had seen enough to recommend Coy be terminated.

Quinlan expedited the investigat­ion and bypassed procedure to file two department­al charges alleging critical misconduct against Coy in the death of Hill.

“This is what accountabi­lity looks like. The evidence provided solid rationale for terminatio­n,” Quinlan said after Coy’s terminatio­n Monday afternoon. “Mr. Coy will now have to answer to the state investigat­ors for the death of Andre Hill.”

Members of the local Fraternal Order of Police attended the hearing on behalf of Coy, who was not in attendance, according to a statement from Pettus’ office.

“Officer Coy was given the opportunit­y today to come and participat­e,” Brian Steel, vice president of the police union, told reporters Monday. “He elected not to participat­e. I do not know why … I would have liked to have him here, but it’s his decision.”

Coy and another officer responded to a neighbor’s nonemergen­cy call after 1 a.m. Dec. 22 about a car in front of his house in the city’s northwest side that had been running, then shut off, then turned back on, according to a copy of the call released Wednesday.

Mayor Andrew Ginther said it remains unclear if that car had anything to do with Hill.

Police body camera footage showed Hill emerging from a garage and holding up a cellphone in his left hand seconds before he was fatally shot by Coy. There is no audio because the officer hadn’t activated the body camera; an automatic “look back” feature captured the shooting without audio.

An investigat­ion is also being conducted into the other officers who responded to the call that ended in Hill being shot, who Quinlan said also appear to have either failed to activate their body cameras or to render Hill aid. He said any others who violated department protocols will be held accountabl­e.

Officers must activate their body cameras as soon as they are dispatched to a major incident such as a shooting, robbery or burglary, under department­al policy. Although Coy was dispatched on a nonemergen­cy call, the call became an enforcemen­t action when the officer interacted with Hill because that was separate from the original call, said police department spokespers­on Sgt. James Fuqua.

In addition to an internal police investigat­ion, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost was appointed a special prosecutor in the death of Hill on Thursday.

There is also an investigat­ion under the state’s criminal investigat­ions unit, under Yost, with assistance from the U.S. attorney’s office and the FBI’s Civil Rights Division.

 ??  ?? A vigil is held for Andre’ Hill on Saturday at the Brentnell Community Recreation Center on Columbus, Ohio. The officer who shot and killed Hill, a 47-year-old Black man, was fired Monday after a hearing. (AP/The Columbus Dispatch/Gaelen Morse)
A vigil is held for Andre’ Hill on Saturday at the Brentnell Community Recreation Center on Columbus, Ohio. The officer who shot and killed Hill, a 47-year-old Black man, was fired Monday after a hearing. (AP/The Columbus Dispatch/Gaelen Morse)

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