Wapakoneta Daily News

Jury sides with Columbus police in trial over force

- By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A federal jury has rejected allegation­s that police in Ohio’s capital city used excessive force when they fatally

shot a man in 2016 during an undercover operation, an episode that led to heightened criticism of actions by Columbus police.

The city has said that 23-year-old Henry Green, who was Black, ignored commands to

drop his gun by officers Zachary Rosen and Jason Bare, who are white. Court documents and deposition­s say Green shot at the undercover officers, who then returned fire. Green’s family has argued Green fired after police shot at him.

Columbus, the state’s largest city, has experience­d multiple protests in recent years over the killing of Black men and children, including last year’s fatal shooting of 16-year-old Ma’kiah Bryant. A grand jury declined to indict the white officer who shot Bryant as she swung a knife at a young woman. The officer said he feared for the woman’s life.

A grand jury had also declined to indict officers Rosen and Bare in Green’s killing, and an internal Columbus police investigat­ion cleared them.

A federal judge dismissed the excessive force lawsuit brought by Green’s family in September 2019, finding it was reasonable to use deadly force under the circumstan­ces. But a federal appeals court reinstated it a year later, determinin­g that a jury could “reasonably conclude” there wasn’t justificat­ion for the officers to use force in this context.

The first trial ended in a mistrial in November 2021. On Monday, a unanimous jury sided with the city after a short deliberati­on, acquitting Rosen and Bare of excessive force and assault and battery allegation­s.

On Tuesday, City Attorney Zachary Klein said his office respects the decision, while noting, “The City Attorney’s Office takes seriously all use of force cases, especially those that result in a tragic loss of life.”

Klein has pushed for change in the department and, along with city Mayor Andrew Ginther, successful­ly requested a Justice Department review of the agency’s practices. That review is ongoing.

Green’s family is disappoint­ed by the decision, which their attorney Sean Walton said doesn’t reflect the evidence presented at trial.

“This civil trial was the first that the city has had to defend for a police shooting in 15 years and that in itself provides hope and optimism that accountabi­lity is on the horizon,” he said. “However, the people of this city should not

have to fight their own leaders who continue to use qualified immunity as a sword to defend bad officers.”

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