Dayton Daily News

$250K bond for sheriff’s deputy charged in shooting

- By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

The Ohio sheriff ’s deputy who shot Casey Goodson Jr. in the back five times pleaded not guilty Friday to charges of murder and reckless homicide nearly one year after the killing of Goodson on Dec. 4, 2020.

A magistrate set bond for defendant Jason Meade at $250,000, which Meade’s attorney said he expected Meade to post Friday. The bond angered a lawyer representi­ng Goodson’s family, who noted a typical bond for a murder charge is $1 million.

“What is a Black life worth in this justice system in America?” asked attorney Sean Walton, who added: “We saw and heard the prosecutor­s in the room today say that there’s nothing that Casey did whatsoever that led to his death.”

The shooting of the 23-year-old Goodson, who was Black, by Meade, a longtime, now-retired deputy who is white, led to protests in Columbus and many lingering questions, in part because the killing was not recorded on body or dash camera footage.

Meade’s lawyer, Mark Collins, says the deputy fired when Goodson pointed a gun at him. Goodson’s family has never denied that Goodson might have been carrying a gun, but has noted he had a license to carry a firearm.

Prosecutor­s say a gun was found in the kitchen after the shooting. Collins said Friday the gun was under Goodson’s body, and Meade moved it as he tried to revive Goodson.

Collins had argued for a reasonable bond, saying Meade has strong ties to the community with no motive for leaving town, has been cooperativ­e over the past year, is a church minister, does not own a passport, and has no weapons at home after they were removed following his indictment.

“This is not a whodunnit,” Collins said.

“This is whether or not our client used reasonable force based on the totality of the situation, the circumstan­ces surroundin­g it, his training in the protocols, and whether or not he subjective­ly believed his life was in danger.”

Prosecutor­s laid out a scenario in which Goodson, returning from a dental appointmen­t with a bag of sandwiches for family members, was shot as he entered his grandmothe­r’s house with his keys already in the door.

He was shot five times in the back and once in the buttocks, said Franklin County special prosecutor Tim Merkle.

“Investigat­ors found no evidence other than Mr. Meade’s self-serving, uncorrobor­ated statement to show that Casey presented a threat to Mr. Meade,” Merkle said Friday. “Rather, the evidence collected revealed that Casey was doing nothing other than entering his residence when Mr. Meade shot him six times.”

The shooting happened as Meade, a 17-year member of the sheriff ’s office, was finishing an unsuccessf­ul search for a fugitive as part of his work for a U.S. Marshals Service task force. Goodson was not the subject of the fugitive search and the Marshals have said Meade wasn’t performing a mission for them at the time of the shooting.

Meade followed Goodson first in his car and then on foot after seeing Goodson in his car point a gun at another driver and then at Meade, and later “waving the firearm erraticall­y,” according to an account provided by Collins.

Goodson’s family has also filed a federal wrongful-death lawsuit against Meade and the sheriff ’s office. The complaint claims Meade received hundreds of hours on firearms and SWAT training but little on violence deescalati­on techniques, despite subpar performanc­es as a deputy, including being placed on “no inmate contact status” for nearly four years.

The lawsuit did not provide details of the reasons for that placement. A Franklin County spokespers­on has declined comment.

Although the shooting did not involve Columbus police, it came at a time of heightened tension over previous shootings of Black people by officers in Ohio’s capital, a situation made worse less than three weeks later when a white Columbus police officer shot and killed 47-yearold Andre Hill as he emerged from a garage holding a cellphone.

Meade, who had been on administra­tive leave since

the shooting, retired July 2 on disability.

 ?? PAUL VERNON/AP ?? Tamala Payne, left, the mother of Casey Goodson Jr., and Brandie Payne react during the arraignmen­t of former Franklin County deputy Jason Meade in Columbus, Friday. Meade, who fatally shot Goodson, pleaded not guilty to charges of murder and reckless homicide.
PAUL VERNON/AP Tamala Payne, left, the mother of Casey Goodson Jr., and Brandie Payne react during the arraignmen­t of former Franklin County deputy Jason Meade in Columbus, Friday. Meade, who fatally shot Goodson, pleaded not guilty to charges of murder and reckless homicide.

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