Ohio cop who shot dead unarmed black man Andre Hill is dismissed – Adam Coy was fired following disciplinary hearing, hours after coroner’s report ruled Hill’s death a homicide
Ohio cop who shot dead unarmed black man Andre Hill was fired following disciplinary hearing on Monday afternoon
Adam Coy, 44, a 17-year veteran of the Columbus police department was fired just hours after coroner’s ruled the 47-year-old’s death a homicide
The termination came a week after he shot dead unarmed black man Andre’ Hill during a non-emergency call in the early hours of Dec 22
Earlier Monday, Franklin County coroner’s ruled Hill’s death a homicide, having determined Hill died of multiple gunshot wounds
Coy fired at Hill six seconds after he emerged from a garage holding a cellphone
During his 17 years in the CPD, Adam Coy has had 36 complaints against him

The Ohio police officer who shot and killed Andre’ Hill last week just seconds after he emerged from a garage with a cellphone in his hand has been fired following a disciplinary hearing.Â
Officer Adam Coy, 44, was terminated Monday afternoon from the Columbus Police Department just hours after the Franklin County coroner’s office ruled Hill’s death a homicide.
Columbus police officer Adam Coy was fired Monday by the city’s public safety director, who said in a written statement that “known facts do not establish that this use of deadly force was objectively reasonable.”
The hearing was led by Director of Public Safety Ned Pettus Jr., who promised a ‘prompt’ decision on Coy’s employment. Hours after the hearing concluded, the 17-year veteran was officially fired.
Coy did not attend the hearing in person, according to local reports.
He is not currently facing any criminal charges, with investigations ongoing.Â
His termination comes seven days after he fatally shot dead 47-year-old Andre Hill in the early hours of December 22.  Â

Police bodycam footage of the fatal exchange shows Hill stepping out of an open garage door holding up a cellphone as two Columbus police officers approach him, just after 1am.Â
Just six seconds later, Coy opens fire at Hill.Â
Hill was pronounced dead less than an hour later at a Riverside Hospital at 2:25am.Â
Earlier Monday, the coroner’s office said their preliminary investigation determined Hill died of multiple gunshot wounds. A full autopsy report is expected in 12 to 14 weeks.Â

Police bodycam footage showed Hill walking toward the police officers with his cellphone in his left hand and his right hand in his pocket on Tuesday moments before he was gunned down.
Coy’s hearing and subsequent termination follows a statement issued by Police Chief Thomas Quinlan on Christmas Eve, in which he stated he’d seen enough to recommend Coy be fired.
Quinlan expedited the investigation and bypassed procedure to file two departmental charges alleging critical misconduct against Coy in the death of Hill.
We have an officer who violated his oath to comply with the rules and policies of the Columbus Division of Police,’ he said. ‘And the consequences of that violation are so great, it requires immediate action. This violation cost an innocent man his life.’

Pettus laid out three specifications in his decision to dismiss the officer, which included violating the division’s use-of-force policy, failing to render aid to Hill after the shooting and failure to activate his body camera while on the call for service
“Prior to shooting Mr. Hill, (Coy) did not attempt to use trained techniques to de-escalate the situation,” according to one of the specifications.
“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,” Pettus said in a statement issued with the decision.
Quinlan also issued a statement.
“When I became chief, I changed our core values to include accountability,” he wrote. “This is what accountability looks like. The evidence provided solid rationale for termination. Mr. Coy will now have to answer to the state investigators for the death of Andre Hill.”

Mayor Andrew J. Ginther released a statement saying he applauded the safety director and police chief “for their swift action in firing Mr. Coy…
“Now we wait on the investigation of (the Ohio Bureau of Investigation), a presentation of evidence to a grand jury and potential federal charges from the U.S. Department of Justice. We expect transparency, accountability and justice. The family and the entire community deserve it.”
Brian Steel, Vice President of FOP Capital City Lodge 9, had confirmed Coy’s termination to The Dispatch earlier in the afternoon.Â
Also Monday, a preliminary report from the Franklin County Coroner’s Office determined Andre Hill’s death to caused by multiple gunshot wounds, the coroner’s office said in a media release. A full autopsy report is expected in 12 to 14 weeks.
The death was classified as a homicide, meaning it was caused by another person.Â
The morning hearing was for Pettus to hear evidence supporting Coy’s termination as well as evidence in defense of the officer.

Coy and the second officer had been responding to a non-emergency call regarding a man ‘sitting in an SUV for an extended period, repeatedly turning the vehicle on and off,’ the Department of Public Safety has since revealed.Â
Mayor Andrew Ginther said it remains unclear if the call had anything to do with Hill.Â
The bodycam footage of the shooting does not initially contain audio because Coy didn’t activate his camera until after the shots rang out. An automatic ‘look back’ feature captured 60 seconds of the exchange without sound.

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.Â
The Police Chief 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.Â
Although Coy was dispatched on a non-emergency 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.Â

The bodycam footage shows Coy arriving at the scene and approaching a garage with an opened door where Hill, who was at a friends house, was standing inside with his back to the officers.
Hill then turns around a takes four steps toward the officers, with his cellphone in his left hand and his right not visible. Â
Within six seconds of Hill turning around, he is shot by Coy and falls to the ground. Â

After pulling the trigger, Coy activated his body camera which then activated the microphone.
The sound starts with him yelling at Hill – who was lying motionless on the ground – ”Put your hands up to the f*****g side!’Â
He then repeated himself: ‘Hands up to the side now! Go onto your stomach now! ‘
Hill remains unmoving on the ground. The cop then screams at his colleague: ‘Don’t get f***** close, I can’t see what’s in his f***** hand!’
He then yells at Hill: ‘Get your hand out from under your stomach, now!’
The cop’s tone then softens, asking: ‘We got a medic coming?’
As Coy approaches Hill, who is still on the ground, he yells: ‘Don’t move, dude!’ He then leans down, with his gun pointed at the back of Hill’s head.Â
The officer then curses under his breath.

Grabbing at Hill, Coy shouts: ‘Roll over dude’ and turns him over.
A woman can be heard in the background yelling: ‘He wasn’t doing nothing!’
Several seconds later she is heard yelling: ‘He didn’t do anything!’
Coy turns to an officer and says: ‘Get me support’. No one goes to the ground to give him first aid. Instead, Coy walks away from him, on to the street, leaving him on the ground.Â
He coughs violently, spits and paces up and down the driveway. What sounds like labored breathing can be heard but it’s unclear if it was Hill struggling for breath.
Another two cops are then filmed approaching Hill. ‘I need another person over here,’ one of them says. The other says: ‘Let’s cuff him up’.
Coy then goes to his car to retrieve a bottle of water while other officers stay with Hill. By this point, it has been eight minutes since he shot Hill.
The video shows that at least six minutes pass before aid is rendered to Hill.Â
Coy does not provide any initial aid and in the intervening minutes, crime scene tape is placed around the scene and more officers arrive. Â
Coy then gets into his patrol car, and picks up a bottle of water. More cops arrive on the scene. He is heard asking: ‘We got any bosses here?’
The recording eventually ends after nearly 14 minutes, when Coy asks if he can switch his bodycam off.Â

The morning hearing was for Pettus to hear evidence supporting Coy’s termination as well as evidence in defense of the officer.
Three members of the Fraternal Order of Police attended the hearing on Coy’s behalf.Â
The public safety director’s office released a 10-page transcript of the hearing, along with the director’s decision.
The administrative case against Coy was presented by police Lt. Tim Myers, although a reading of the charges and specifications was waived by John Davis, representing Coy as assistant grievance chair for the FOP.
“Unlike the vast majority of other uses of deadly force by our officers, the evidence at hand indicates that this killing was not objectively reasonable,” Myers said, according to the transcript.
Coy shot Hill “without legal justification,” he said.
“When the actions of one of our own falls short, we have a responsibility to identify it, address it, correct it, and prevent it.”

In addition to an internal police investigation, Attorney General Dave Yost was appointed a special prosecutor in the death of Hill on Thursday.
‘We will do our duty based on the facts and the law,’ Yost said in a tweet. ‘Whatever the outcome, someone will be angry-but the decision will be objective.’
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.
Prior to his Monday firing, Coy had been relieved of duty, ordered to turn in his gun and badge, and stripped of police powers pending an outcome of an internal investigation.

The 44-year-old was a 17-year veteran of the force and had more than 36 complaints made against him including a dozen alleging excessive use of force. The city has not released any more details about those complaints.
According to The Columbus Dispatch, one involved him banging a man’s head against the hood of a car during a drunk driving arrest.
The city paid the man $45,000 and Coy was suspended for 160 hours.Â
Hill’s family, meanwhile, have hired Ben Crump, the famed civil rights attorney who has represented the family’s of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.Â
Crump said in a statement last week that Hill is the 47th unarmed black man to be shot dead by cops this year.Â
Reacting to the coroner’s determination Monday, Crump tweeted: ‘Andre Hill’s death is another tragic example of the tendency of police to view Black people as criminal or dangerous, and it points to the need for comprehensive, national police reform.
‘The family wants to review all the bodycam footage as soon as possible.’Â


Last week, Mayor Ginther, meanwhile said he was ‘very disturbed by what he had seen, after the bodycam footage was released publicly.
‘From what we can see, none of the officers initially at the scene provide medical assistance to Mr Hill.
‘No compression on the wounds to stop the bleeding. No attempts at CPR. Not even a hand on the shoulder and an encouraging word that medics were en route.’
A vigil was held for Hill over the weekend, in which family and friends remembered him as a great cook with a passion for people.Â
Hill, better known by loved ones as Big Daddy, was also said to be passionate about the Black Lives Matter movement and was wearing a BLM shirt on the night he was shot dead by Columbus police.
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