A
display
put up
by an
attorney
for
Sonya
Massey’s
family
shows a
picture
of the
36-year-old
woman
and a
diagram
from her
autopsy.
Massey
was shot
and
killed
earlier
this
month
after
she
called
911 for
help.
(Mawa
Iqbal/WBEZ) |
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Sonya
Massey’s
son
Malachi
Hill
speaks
during a
press
conference
in
Springfield,
Ill. on
July 26.
Massey
was shot
and
killed
on July
5. (Mawa
Iqbal/WBEZ) |
|
Autopsy
shows
Sonya
Massey
was
killed
by a
gunshot
under
her eye
By Mawa
Iqbal,
and Mary
Norkol
Chicago
Sun-Times
6–7
minute
read
CHICAGO
- An
autopsy
report
released
Friday
by
Sangamon
County
officials
shows
Springfield
resident
Sonya
Massey
was
killed
by a
gunshot
wound
just
under
her left
eye.
Massey,
36, had
called
law
enforcement
to her
home to
report a
possible
intruder.
Then-Sheriff’s
Deputy
Sean
Grayson,
one of
the
responding
officers,
shot her
in the
head,
saying
he
feared
Massey
would
throw a
pot of
boiling
water at
him.
Body
camera
footage,
however,
shows
Massey
ducking
for
cover
behind
her
kitchen
counter
with her
hands in
the air
before
Grayson
fired at
her.
Massey
was
pronounced
dead
just an
hour
after
she made
the 911
call.
“The
autopsy
confirms
what
everybody
already
knows
from the
video,”
civil
rights
attorney
Ben
Crump
said at
a press
conference
Friday.
“This
was just
a
senseless,
unnecessary
excessive
use of
force.
Completely
unnecessary,
certainly
not
justified.”
Crump is
representing
Massey’s
family.
Previously
he
represented
the
families
of
George
Floyd
and
Breonna
Taylor.
Crump
said the
U.S.
Justice
Department
is
investigating
the
shooting.
A
spokesperson
with the
U.S.
Department
of
Justice
told
WBEZ the
agency
is
“aware
of and
assessing
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
tragic
officer-involved
death”
and
extended
“condolences
to her
family
and
loved
ones.”
The
spokesman
said the
DOJ will
continue
to track
the
criminal
case
opened
by the
Sangamon
County
State’s
Attorney.

Grayson
has
since
been
fired
from the
Sangamon
County
Sheriff’s
Department,
and has
been
arrested
on three
counts
of first
degree
murder.
He is
being
held in
jail
until
trial,
which
will be
set on
August
26th.
Crump
said he
told the
DOJ that
they
should
look
into
Grayson’s
employment
history.
Before
joining
law
enforcement,
Grayson
had been
arrested
twice
for
driving
under
the
influence
and once
for
driving
on a
suspended
license.
Sangamon
County
was his
sixth
law
enforcement
agency
in four
years.
Before
joining
the
sheriff’s
office,
Grayson
had
worked
for
smaller,
rural
jurisdictions.
Crump
said he
so far
knows of
two
allegations
of
misconduct
lodged
against
Grayson
before
he got a
job in
Springfield.
Meanwhile,
the
Massey
family
said
they
spoke
with
Vice
President
Kamala
Harris
who
offered
her
condolences.
In a
statement
Tuesday,
Harris
called
the
killing
“senseless”
and
footage
of the
shooting
“disturbing.”
The
autopsy
report
released
Friday
shows
that
Massey
had
traces
of
gabapentin
– a
medication
used to
treat
seizures
and
nerve
pain –
in her
system,
but was
otherwise
in good
physical
health.
Massey’s
family
members
said she
had been
diagnosed
with
schizophrenia,
and was
dealing
with
mental
health
issues
up to
her
death.
Her
teenage
son,
Malachi
Hill,
said
during
Friday’s
press
conference
he and
his
younger
sister
were
living
with
their
respective
fathers
while
their
mom
sought
treatment.
Hill
said his
mom had
visited
St. John
Hospital’s
Behavioral
Health
Unit in
Springfield
for a
consultation
on July
5. She
was shot
and
killed
shortly
after
midnight
on July
6. Hill,
who was
wearing
a purple
button
with his
mom’s
name and
picture
on it,
said he
still
hasn’t
watched
the body
camera
footage
of the
night
his
mother
was
shot.

On
Friday
evening
in
Chicago,
about a
dozen
people
gathered
in the
South
Shore
neighborhood
to
protest
Massey’s
death.
Chants
of “Say
her
name”
and
“Sonya
Massey”
rung out
across
71st
Street
near
Bennett
Avenue.
Tyler
Pasciak
LaRiviere/Sun-Times
“The
first
night I
don’t go
to my
mother’s
house,
this
happens.
How?
Why?”
Hill
said. “I
wonder
if I was
there,
if he
would
have did
anything
to me. I
don’t
know.”
Massey’s
cousin,
Shadia,
said
Massey’s
daughter
is
having
trouble
sleeping.
“For her
to go to
the
bathroom,
she has
to be on
FaceTime
with
me,”
Massey
said.
“For her
to get a
drink of
water
she has
to call
us
before
she gets
into her
bed. No,
this is
the
hardest
thing
that we
have
ever
been
through
as a
Massey.
It just
breaks
my heart
that our
family
has to
go
through
this.”
Lapis
Marigold,
an
organizer
with
RevCom,
speaks
at a
protest
Friday
evening
in the
South
Shore
neighborhood.
Marigold
urged
people
who
haven’t
seen the
body
camera
footage
of Sonya
Massey’s
killing
to watch
it to
understand
what
happened.
Wiping
away
tears,
Gloria
Pinex
said
Massey’s
killing
brought
back
painful
memories
of her
son
Darius
Pinex’s
2011
death at
the
hands of
Chicago
police.
“It’s a
shame
that we
out here
once
again,”
Pinex
said
addressing
the
crowd.
“It just
hurts,
brings
tears to
my eyes
thinking
about
what she
was
going
through,
what she
was
thinking.
I’m
angry
and I’m
hurt all
at the
same
time all
over
again.”
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