Tuesday, August 6, 2024 - The deputy sheriff who fatally shot Sonya Massey in her Illinois home last month said he believed that when the Black woman who called police for help unexpectedly said, “I rebuke you in the name of Jesus,” that she intended to k!ll him, according to the deputy’s field report released Monday, August 5.
“I interpreted this to mean she was going to kill me,” Sean Grayson
wrote, adding that when he drew his pistol and Massey hid behind a counter that
separated them, he moved around the obstacle fearing that she was going to grab
a weapon.
Sonya Massey was shot and killed by a responding officer
after she called 911 because she thought there was an intruder in her home,
according to officials.
Grayson and a second unidentified deputy answered her call
about a suspected prowler just before 1 a.m. Inside her home, Grayson directed
that a pan of water be removed from a burner on the stove. Grayson and Massey
shared a chuckle as he warily moved away from the “hot steaming water.”
“Sonya turned to face me holding the pot. I did not know the
type of liquid that was boiling,” Grayson wrote in his report three days after
the incident.
“I advised Sonya to put the boiling liquid down. Sonya
stated (she) was going to rebuke me in the name of Jesus. She stated this
twice. I interpreted this to mean she was going to kill me.”
Massey’s family has said that Sonya Massey struggled with
mental health issues. She met the deputies at her front door by repeating,
“Please God” and inside the house, asked Grayson to pass her a Bible.
Upon hearing the religious admonition, Grayson then drew his
pistol and barked commands to “drop the (expletive) pot.” Massey ducked behind
the counter, rose up and appeared to grab the pan again before diving for
cover. Grayson said he stepped toward and around the counter to keep Massey in
sight, wary that she might have a hidden weapon.
Grayson, a 30-year-old Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy,
faces first-degree murder, aggravated battery and official misconduct charges
in the death of the 36-year-old woman on July 6 which has drawn nationwide
protests over the killing of Black people by police in their homes.
Grayson has pleaded not guilty.
Massey’s family has called for the resignation of Sheriff
Jack Campbell who has refused to step down arguing that problems in Grayson’s
past should have precluded a law enforcement assignment.
“As I approached the cabinet,
Sonya stood up from a crouched position, grabbing the pot, raising it above her
head and throwing the boiling substance at me,” Grayson reported. “I was in
imminent fear of getting boiling liquid to my face or chest, which would have
caused great bodily harm or death.”
It’s unclear from the video whether Massey attempted to toss
the pan’s contents, and she was obscured from view when Grayson fired three 9
mm rounds, one of which struck Massey just below the eye. His report then
indicates he looked down to see the liquid had “hit my boots and I observed
steam coming from the cabinet area.”
By the time he completed the field report July 9, Grayson
had been placed on administrative leave. The document indicates he received
department permission to review the body camera video, the bulk of which had
been recorded on the other deputy’s camera. Grayson said he thought his was on
when the two first met Massey at the door, but he didn’t turn it on until just
after the shooting.
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