sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Judge: Deputy who killed Casey Goodson not a federal agent

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) 鈥 The Ohio sheriff's deputy who fatally shot Casey Goodson Jr. was not acting in his role as a deputized U.S.
20220217120224-620e850d42d25e080f9729efjpeg
Sean Walton, left, an attorney representing the family of Casey Goodson Jr., and Goodson's mother, Tamala Payne, take questions after a hearing to determine whether the former Ohio sheriff's deputy who fatally shot Goodson in 2020 should be tried in state or federal court, on Friday, Feb. 11, 2022, in Columbus, Ohio. Walton said murder cases are almost always tried in state court, and said that's where this prosecution belongs. (AP Photo/Andrew Welsh-Huggins)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) 鈥 The Ohio sheriff's deputy who fatally shot Casey Goodson Jr. was not acting in his role as a deputized U.S. marshal at the time of the shooting, and must remain in state court, a federal judge ruled Thursday in a victory for prosecutors who charged the deputy.

Defendant Jason Meade, who is white, has pleaded not guilty to murder and reckless homicide in the 2020 death of 23-year-old Casey Goodson Jr. as he entered his grandmother鈥檚 house following a dental appointment, according to his family and prosecutors.

Meade did not have authority to arrest Goodson as a task force member and was not acting as a federal officer at the time, federal Judge Edmund Sargus Jr. of the U.S. District Court, Southern District of Ohio ruled Thursday.

鈥淢eade鈥檚 only authority to arrest Goodson came from his state authority as a deputy sheriff to enforce state law,鈥 Sargus said. 鈥淭his case is properly tried in state court.鈥 The judge said it was the first time he had handled such a case in 25 years on the bench.

Mark Collins, one of Meade's attorneys, said he's reviewing the ruling and then will decide whether to appeal.

Meade鈥檚 attorneys wanted the case tried in federal court as a step toward having the state charges dismissed, and because it was far less likely Meade would be charged with killing Goodson under federal law. Franklin County to keep the charges alive in state court.

Meade was a full-time Franklin County Sheriff鈥檚 Department deputy on regular assignment with immediately before the shooting. Meade was finished with his task force assignments for the day when, he and his attorneys say, he saw Goodson nearby in a car waving a gun in a threatening manner.

After following Goodson, a confrontation between the two led to Meade shooting Goodson six times, including five times in the back, according to Meade鈥檚 statements and the coroner鈥檚 autopsy report.

Meade鈥檚 lawyers says the deputy fired when Goodson pointed a gun at him. Goodson鈥檚 family has never denied that Goodson might have had a gun on him but has also noted he had a license to carry a gun.

Goodson鈥檚 family says he was opening the door to his grandmother鈥檚 house holding a bag of sandwiches at the time he was shot. Investigators said a gun was recovered from the scene but have not provided further details.

Meade said in a statement taken shortly after the shooting that he yelled, 鈥淯.S. Marshals! It鈥檚 the police!鈥 and 鈥淪how me your hands!鈥 Meade retired from the sheriff鈥檚 department last year on disability.

In the days after Goodson's death, racial injustice protesters took to the streets of Ohio's capital. A federal civil rights lawsuit filed by Goodson's family alleges the Franklin County Sheriff's Office failed to investigate claims of unreasonable force against Black residents and failed to properly train deputies on firing guns at civilians, 鈥減articularly at African Americans.鈥

Meade鈥檚 salary was still paid by the county, and he was authorized only to 鈥渟eek and execute arrest and search warrants鈥 under his marshals鈥 assignment, according to court documents and testimony at the Feb. 11 hearing.

Cases of fugitives pursued by the task force must be issued a federal identification number and the warrant verified before a task force member can take action, Charles Sanso, a U.S. marshal who oversees four such operations in Ohio, testified Feb. 11. Neither situation existed with Goodson, he said.

After reviewing Meade鈥檚 actions the day of the shooting, 鈥淲e concluded that this was not a marshal service shooting,鈥 said Sanso, a witness called by prosecutors.

When Meade saw Goodson with the gun, an act that amounted to a state crime, 鈥渉e was not exercising federal authority,鈥 Elizabeth Ellis, a special Franklin County prosecutor, told the judge Feb. 11.

But Ryan Rosser, a current member of the Columbus fugitive task force, testified on behalf of Meade that he couldn鈥檛 equivocally say whether Meade was acting as a sheriff鈥檚 deputy that day.

Meade鈥檚 attorneys hope to have him covered by immunity provided to federal officers, meaning his case could not be tried in a state court and the charges would have to be dismissed.

Meade has pleaded not guilty and is free on $250,000 bond.

The lawsuit filed by Goodson鈥檚 family against Meade and the sheriff鈥檚 office also claims that Meade received hundreds of hours of firearms and SWAT training but little on violence de-escalation techniques.

Andrew Welsh-huggins, The Associated Press