Wapakoneta Daily News

Black man shot by deputy, ruled homicide

- By FARNOUSH AMIRI and ANDREW WELSH- HUGGINS

— A Black man shot by an Ohio sheriff’s deputy died from multiple gunshot wounds in his torso, a coroner said Wednesday citing preliminar­y autopsy results.

A preliminar­y autopsy was conducted Tuesday on Casey Goodson Jr., with final results not expected for at least three months, said Dr. Anahi Ortiz, the coroner representi­ng Franklin County, home to Columbus where Goodson was killed.

Ortiz listed the cause of death as homicide, a medical determinat­ion used in cases where someone has died at someone else’s hand, but is not a legal finding and doesn’t imply criminal intent. Police have only said that the deputy ‘ shot’ Goodson without detailing how many shots were fired.

The FBI is reviewing the Dec. 4 fatal shooting of Goodson, whose family says he was holding a sandwich, not a gun when he was shot, and that he was shot by a Franklin County sheriff’s deputy in front of two toddlers and his grandmothe­r while inside his home, not outside it, as authoritie­s assert.

The preliminar­y autopsy report released five days after Goodson’s death does not resolve the conflictin­g accounts, said Chandra Brown, an attorney representi­ng Goodson’s family.

“It is concerning that they’ve had the body for this long and they still cannot confirm the entrance or exit wounds of the gunshots,” Brown said Wednesday. “It seems intentiona­lly vague and we’re looking forward to getting the official autopsy report when that is released.” The coroner’s office declined to comment.

The state declined a request by Columbus police to review the shooting after Republican Attorney General Dave Yost said the police department waited three days to ask for the state to take the case and after the crime scene had been dismantled. The case was initially given to city police because the Sheriff’s Office does not oversee investigat­ions of its own deputies in fatal shootings

Goodson’s relatives and law enforcemen­t officials have given conflictin­g details of Goodson’s death. The Sheriff’s Office does not provide officers with body cameras, and the deputy’s SWAT vehicle did not have a dashmounte­d camera.

“My grandson just got shot in the back when he came in the house,” Goodson’s grandmothe­r told a dispatcher in a 911 call. “I don’t know if he’s OK.”

Goodson had just gone to the dentist, she told the dispatcher, and she didn’t know what had happened or who shot him.

The victim’s mother responded to police reports that the deputy deemed Goodson a threat by saying her son “would not have harmed a fly.”

“The kid had a whole life ahead of him,” Tamala Payne told CNN Wednesday. “He had plans, he had dreams, he had goals, and they were ripped from him for nothing.”

Payne also disputed claims Goodson didn’t listen to police commands. “His body fell into the house with the sandwiches, with the bullet hole,” she said. “If my son was given a command, he would have listened,” she said.

The deputy, who police say commanded Goodson to drop his gun, was Jason Meade, a 17- year veteran of the Sheriff’s Office. He had been assigned to a U. S. Marshals Office fugitive task force that had just finished an unsuccessf­ul search for a fugitive Friday afternoon.

U. S. Marshal Peter Tobin said the day of the shooting that Meade confronted Goodson outside his home after Goodson, who was not the subject of the fugitive search, drove by and waved a gun at Meade.

One witness heard Meade command Goodson to drop his gun, and when he didn’t, the deputy shot him, Tobin said. Goodson was taken to a hospital, where he died.

The Sheriff’s Office and a police union have declined to comment on behalf of Meade.

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