Adam Coy, the Columbus, Ohio, police officer who shot and killed Andre Hill, was fired Monday, according to a statement from Public Safety Director Ned Pettus Jr.
Coyâs termination follows a disciplinary hearing held earlier in the day. The local chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police represented him at the hearing.
âThe information, evidence and representations made by Chief (Thomas) Quinlan as the investigator are, in my opinion, indisputable. His disciplinary recommendation is well-supported and appropriate,â Pettus said. âThe 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.â
Coy fatally shot Hill, who was Black, last Tuesday within seconds of their encounter, as Hill walked toward Coy holding an illuminated cell phone in his left hand, body camera footage shows. Hill was unarmed.
Quinlan had recommended firing Coy. Quinlan said in a statement Monday the evidence against Coy provided âsolid rationaleâ for termination.
âThis is what accountability looks like,â Quinlan said, adding that Coy will now have to answer to state investigators regarding Hillâs death.
CNN left a message for the Fraternal Order of Police on Monday but did not receive a response.
Coy didnât attend Mondayâs hearing but was represented by his union. His union representatives noted the city served Coyâs attorney, whoâs on vacation, after 5 p.m. on Christmas Eve, before a holiday weekend, for a Monday morning hearing.
They wanted to preserve âall contractual and just-cause argumentsâ because the lawyer was not available.
Quinlan sought Coyâs firing because he said Coy shot Hill and didnât activate his body-worn camera when he responded to the call or render aid after shooting Hill. Coy turned his camera on after the shooting, and the cameraâs look-back feature captured the 60 seconds prior to Coy turning it on.
âKnown facts do not establish that this use of deadly force was objectively reasonable. You failed to de-escalate, and failed to render aid,â Pettus wrote in his ruling.
Pettus said the actions of Coy and other officers officers who were at the scene will continue to be investigated and use of body-worn cameras and duty to render aid will be among actions under further review. Police have released only Coyâs camera footage.
âBecause of the potential for those cases to come before me, and to protect the integrity and impartiality of that process and any future ruling, it is not appropriate for me to comment further,â Pettus said.
Mayor Andrew Ginther applauded the decision to fire Coy. Ohioâs Bureau of Criminal Investigation is also reviewing the case for potential criminal charges.
âNow we wait on the investigation of BCI, a presentation of the 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,â Ginther said.
Coy has not been charged.
Hillâs family and attorney Ben Crump, in a statement, said it was âthe correct decisionâ to fire Coy.
âWe look forward to reviewing all the bodycam footage and determining everything that happened leading to Andre Hillâs death,â the statement read.
A non-emergency disturbance
Before Mondayâs hearing, Quinlan wrote memos outlining rules he believes Coy broke during the shooting. The memos allege Coy wrongfully used deadly force, didnât turn on his body-worn camera and failed to render aid.
Mondayâs hearing dealt only with potential discipline of the officer based on the police chiefâs recommendation that Coy be fired. The hearing was not open to the public. The officer can appeal his firing.
Coy shot Hill after responding to a non-emergency disturbance call last week. Coyâs failure to activate his camera as he got out of his car and approached Hill is one reason Quinlan sought his firing.
The departmentâs rules state âsworn personnel shall activate (body-worn cameras) at the start of an enforcement action,â which includes any call for service or self-initiated activity, according to a memo written by Quinlan.
The video shows Coy walking toward an unlit garage before he turns on a flashlight, illuminating Hill and much of the garage.
Quinlan alleged Coy didnât attempt to deescalate the situation using trained techniques such as âbuilding rapport, communication skills, maintaining a safe distance, and utilizing a barrierâ and didnât use âtime, distance, barrier, communications and de-escalationâ techniques to avoid shooting Hill.
The body camera footage appears to show Coy walking toward Hill as Hill walks toward the officer. Coy started shooting within a few seconds of seeing Hill. Itâs not clear whether Hill or Coy said anything during their brief interaction because Coy didnât turn on his camera until after the shooting.
The first few seconds of Coyâs body camera video in which audio is available shows Coy ordering Hill to get his hands out to the side, ordering him to get on his stomach, warning an officer to not get close because one of Hillâs arms is under the car where he collapsed.
About 37 seconds after the shooting, Coy asked whether a medic was coming.
The departmentâs use-of-force directive also requires officers whoâve used deadly force to âcause any needed medical aid to be renderedâ after an incident, and Quinlanâs memo stated âOfficer Coy failed to provide medical aid or ensure others did so.â
In the memo, Quinlan stated he responded to the scene of the shooting and reviewed footage on scene. After that, he ordered Coy relieved of duty and Coy surrendered his badge and gun. Quinlan stripped him of police authority and interviewed another officer who witnessed the shooting.
Days after the shooting, Quinlan said he had seen âeverythingâ he needs to seek Coyâs firing.
âSome may call this a rush to judgment. It is not. We have an officer who violated his oath to comply with rules and policies of the Columbus Division of Police and the consequences of that violations are so great it requires immediate termination,â Quinlan said in a video posted to Facebook. âThis violation cost an innocent man his life.â
Family outraged
Crump and Hillâs sister, Shawna Barnett, pushed for transparency in Hillâs shooting during a Monday morning interview on CNNâs âNew Day.â
âThereâs video that the family understands exists, that after seven minutes of him laying motionless on the ground, they did put him in handcuffs,â Crump said. âSo weâre demanding that the other police bodycam video be released so the world can see that they continued to show disrespect to unarmed Black people.â
A crowd gathers around Andre Hill's daughter Karissa Hill and nephew Terry Fagain at a news conference and candlelight vigil for Hill on Saturday.
Stephen Zenner/AFP/Getty Images
Columbus police released 13 minutes of footage from Coyâs body camera last week. The footage shows a group of officers approaching Hill, whoâs lying on the ground, about seven minutes after the shooting, but because Coy was pacing around the scene and police havenât released additional video, itâs not clear when Hill was handcuffed.
Hillâs family has raised concerns about Hill being handcuffed and asked for other video evidence to be released.
Hillâs death came as residents and activists are reeling from the shooting death of Casey Goodson Jr. by a county sheriffâs deputy earlier this month. The Black communityâs relationship with Columbus police has long been strained, residents say, and demonstrators rallied after the deaths of Goodson and Hill demanding more accountability for police.
Barnett expressed her outrage toward Columbus police officersâ alleged conduct after her brother was shot.
âAnimals have more rights than we do right now,â she said. âTo let my brother lay there and die and not offer him any help in the whole 13-minute footage that we watched is unacceptable. ⦠While the officer was able to relieve his cough and get water, they let my brother lay there and didnât offer any help or assistance to him.â
Karissa Hill told CNNâs Alisyn Camerota that her 6-year-old son, who knew Hill and referred to him as âBig Daddyâ â saw the video on the news on his own.
âMy son just said that he prays to God that Big Daddy gets off the floor and comes home,â she said.
The shooting deaths of Goodson and Hill are now part of separate federal civil rights investigations. The cases grabbed national headlines and were heavily criticized by activists, local residents and some city leaders who have asked for more accountability.
In a joint statement released Monday, the Peopleâs Justice Project, Black Abolitionist Collective of Ohio and Central Ohio Freedom Fund said Hill was âmurdered for just being Blackâ and called for Coy to be charged and convicted of murder.
The Franklin County coronerâs office Monday announced preliminary findings of its autopsy, saying Hillâs death was a homicide by multiple gunshot wounds. That designation does not reflect whether the shooting followed city policy or legal under state law â only that Hillâs death was caused by another person, which is not in dispute. A full autopsy will be completed in 12 to 14 weeks, the agency said.