Union still deciding action on officer fired in Hill’s death
COLUMBUS, OHIO » The union that represents Columbus police officers hasn’t decided yet whether to formally challenge the firing of the officer who shot and killed Andre Hill on Dec. 22.
The city fired officer Adam Coy, who is white, days after he shot and killed Hill, the Black man who walked out of a garage holding a cellphone. Police union president Keith Ferrell said Monday the organization is waiting for more information.
“I don’t think it would be fair for me to stand up here and tell you that Officer Coy did everything right, because I don’t know that,” said Ferrell, president of Capital City Lodge No. 9. “That’s not responsible for me to do that.”
Once the investigation is complete, the union “may or may not” file for arbitration.
However, in a procedural move Monday, the union notified the city of its intent to seek arbitration. Ferrell said the notification was necessary because the city didn’t grant the union an extension to continue its own investigation.
Ferrell said it is not uncommon for the union, which represents officers in several central Ohio police departments, to choose not to fight an officer’s firing.
“We are fully prepared to defend our position when arbitration is scheduled,”
Columbus Public Safety Director Ned Pettus Jr. wrote in a statement.
Democratic Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther and Police Chief Thomas Quinlan have criticized the officers who responded to Hill’s shooting for not providing any medical aid for several minutes. Quinlan says Hill should be alive today.
Ferrell didn’t directly address this criticism Monday, but said more training and equipment will be necessary, depending on what the city thinks officers should do in such circumstances.
“The level of training significantly would have to increase if you want us to be medics, and the equipment is not sufficient now to allow those things,” he said.