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Ohio grand jury doesn’t indict officer for fatally shooting boy, 13

Columbus Police Chief Kim Jacobs, in September, displays a photo showing the type of BB gun that police say 13-year-old Tyre King pulled from his waistband just before he was shot and killed by a police officer investigating an armed robbery report.
Columbus Police Chief Kim Jacobs, in September, displays a photo showing the type of BB gun that police say 13-year-old Tyre King pulled from his waistband just before he was shot and killed by a police officer investigating an armed robbery report.
(Fred Squillante / Associated Press)
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A grand jury voted on Friday not to indict a white Columbus police officer in the fatal shooting of a black 13-year-old boy after a suspected robbery last year.

The Franklin County grand jury was considering whether Officer Bryan Mason should be charged criminally in the September shooting of Tyre King. Police have said Mason shot the teen after he pulled a BB gun that looked like a real firearm from his waistband during a foot pursuit.

A county coroner said Tyre died of gunshot wounds to the head and torso and the manner of death was homicide, which is standard in the county when a person is shot, regardless of the circumstances.

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Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien released a statement Friday that presents a version of the shooting and details the grand jury process. The statement provides no opinion from O’Brien on the grand jury’s decision that Mason was justified in killing Tyre.

“Officer Mason stated that King was removing the BB pistol, that appeared to be a semiautomatic handgun, from his waistband when Officer Mason shot him three times,” the statement said. “The BB gun was recovered on the ground at the scene several feet” from where King lay.

O’Brien said the grand jury first met on Thursday. His statement said a judge gave the grand jurors instructions on police use of deadly force “derived directly from U.S. and Ohio Supreme Court decisions.” O’Brien said it’s his policy that all fatal police shootings are presented to grand juries.

Attorney Sean Walton issued a statement Friday on behalf of Tyre’s family.

“Tyre’s family is saddened and completely dissatisfied with how the entire investigation was handled by the City of Columbus, the Columbus Division of Police and the Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office,” the statement said. “The deliberate indifference for the lives of its citizens displayed by the City of Columbus and the pain Tyre’s family has dealt with since his death was only exacerbated by the Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office’s apparent bias in presenting evidence and witnesses to the grand jury.”

Walton said he and Tyre’s parents and grandparents met with O’Brien and two assistant county prosecutors on Monday. According to Walton, O’Brien told them that the prosecution’s approach before the grand jury would be to rely on evidence from Columbus police, which Walton said the family found “extremely disheartening.”

Walton has argued that because Tyre was shot three times on the left side, the results indicate he was running away at the time and not posing a threat to police. A medical examiner hired by the family reached the same conclusion.

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O’Brien said a grand jury only inquires into whether a crime has been committed and in this incident whether any degree of unlawful criminal homicide occurred.

Mason was just two days into a new assignment when he responded to a robbery call in the city’s Olde Town East neighborhood. That’s where he encountered a 19-year-old and Tyre, who fled, leading to the chase and shooting. Mason’s personnel file is full of commendations. He had been involved in three previous shootings, including one that was fatal, and was cleared of wrongdoing each time.

The 19-year-old man with Tyre the night of the shooting pleaded guilty to a robbery charge in November and agreed to testify against others as part of a plea deal. Demetrious Braxton told tthe Columbus Dispatch that Tyre had a BB gun that looked like a real firearm and wanted to rob someone.

The shooting has been a flashpoint in and around Columbus and spurred protests, including disruptions at Columbus City Council meetings. It added to a list of killings of black males by police that have aroused national outrage.

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