Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • USA TODAY

    Sheriff in charge of deputy who killed Sonya Massey declines to resign, asks for forgiveness

    By Steven Spearie and Minnah Arshad, USA TODAY NETWORK,

    3 hours ago

    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – An Illinois sheriff who hired the deputy charged with killing Sonya Massey in her own kitchen asked for the public's forgiveness Monday, saying that the 36-year-old woman "called for help and we failed her."

    "We failed Sonya and the community," Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell told a packed hall of about 300 people at Union Baptist Church Monday night. "I ask your forgiveness."

    The Justice Department's community relations service organized the "listening session" for the grieving community about three weeks after Massey’s killing. Sean Grayson, at the time of the July 6 shooting a Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy, has since been fired and is charged with murder after responding to Massey’s 911 call about a possible intruder at her home.

    "Sonya Massey. I will say her name and I'll never forget her," Campbell told the crowd Monday. "I cannot imagine the pain that her family and friends feel right now. I'm sorry . . . We did not do our jobs." The audience applauded after the comment.

    Justice officials opened a federal probe into Massey's killing as chaotic and gruesome body-worn camera footage released to the public last week revealed harrowing details of the case. Massey was fatally shot in the face by Grayson, who according to a transcript ordered her to put down a pot of boiling water.

    Her death has sparked national outcry and renewed calls for police reform, with vigils springing up from coast to coast over the weekend.

    Campbell, the sheriff who hired Grayson, said he would not step down, contending it would not solve anything if he did.

    "I stand here before you with my arms wide open and I ask for your forgiveness and I ask Ms. Massey and her family for her forgiveness. I offer up no excuses," Campbell told the crowd.

    Former Springfield Mayor Jim Langfelder said the fatal shooting of Massey set Springfield, Ill. back "100 years," a reference to the Springfield Race Riot of 1908 that gave rise to NAACP in 1909.

    Video of Massey's killing will 'shock the conscience of America'

    Monday's meeting is the latest emotional stirring that Massey's death has brought to the nation.

    Civil rights attorney Ben Crump said at Massey's funeral that the body camera video would "shock the conscience of America like the pictures of Emmett Till after he was lynched." The 1955 lynching of the 14-year-old in Mississippi helped galvanize the Civil Rights movement.

    Crump added that the video would garner similar reactions to Laquan McDonald , who was shot by police 16 times in the back in Chicago in 2014, and George Floyd, who was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer during an arrest in 2020.

    "It is that senseless, that unnecessary, that unjustifiable, that unconstitutional," Crump said. "This video is tragic in every sense."

    Sonya Massey fatally shot in her kitchen

    Massey called 911 to report a possible intruder in her Springfield home on July 6. Thirty minutes later, she was dead.

    According to charging documents, Grayson drew his 9-millimeter gun and threatened to shoot Massey in the face. Grayson "aggressively yelled" for her to put down a pot of boiling water. As Grayson drew close to Massey, he fired three times at about 1:21 a.m., striking her once in the face.

    Massey put her hands in the air, said "I'm sorry" and ducked for cover, charging documents detailed.

    Grayson had not activated his body-worn camera until then, though another sheriff's deputy had his activated after arriving at Massey's house.

    2023 was deadliest year for police killings

    Massey's death is the latest police killing to sweep the nation as civil rights advocates sound the alarm on the rise of such incidents. A Mapping Police Violence report released earlier this year found that 2023 was the deadliest year for police killings in the U.S.

    Police killed more than 1,300 people in 2023, a year that saw several high-profile cases, including the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols in Memphis, Tennessee, the shooting of an environmental activist who was protesting the construction of a police and fire training center near Atlanta, and the death of a Virginia man who was "smothered" in a hospital.

    There were only 14 days without a police killing last year and on average, law enforcement officers killed someone every 6.6 hours, according to the report , which is primarily based on news reports and includes data from state and local government agencies.

    The number of such killings has risen since Campaign Zero, which runs the Mapping Police Violence project, began tracking the data in 2013.

    Contributing: N'dea Yancey-Bragg, USA TODAY

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Sheriff in charge of deputy who killed Sonya Massey declines to resign, asks for forgiveness

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0