COLUMBUS, Ohio — Jurors at the murder trial of an Ohio officer charged in the death of a pregnant Black mother who had been accused of shoplifting were asked Wednesday to focus on answering one question: Was it ''reasonable'' for him to fatally shoot her?
A prosecutor said in her closing argument that 21-year-old Ta'Kiya Young wasn't a threat to Blendon Township police officer Connor Grubb when he shot her in a supermarket parking lot. Rather, she was trying to get away.
''The state is not saying that the defendant woke up that morning and wanted to discharge his firearm,'' Montgomery County Prosecutor Erin Claypoole said. ''The state is saying when he made that decision, it was not a reasonable one, which means it was not a justified shooting.''
Defense attorney Mark Collins accused the prosecution of advancing ''false narratives" about the sequence of events. In his closing, he downplayed prosecutors' emphasis on death being a severe penalty for the misdemeanor crime that Young was alleged to have committed. Instead, he highlighted that Grubb feared for his life as he perceived she was accelerating her vehicle toward him and felt himself being struck. That fear made his use of force ''objectively reasonable,'' the defense has said.
''The reaction of his use of force wasn't prompted because of the theft from the store," he said. "It was the car coming at him. It's just not that complicated, ladies and gentlemen.''
Grubb faces up to life in prison if convicted of murder. He's also charged with involuntary manslaughter and felonious assault in Young's death on Aug. 24, 2023. Franklin County Common Pleas Judge David Young, no relation to Ta'Kiya, dropped four of 10 counts against him that related to the death of Young's unborn daughter, agreeing with his attorneys Tuesday that prosecutors failed to present proof that Grubb knew Young was pregnant when he shot her.
The prosecution and defense both rested Tuesday after a roughly two-week trial. Jurors were shown bodycam video of the shooting, and heard testimony from a use-of-force expert, an accident reconstructionist, the officer who with Grubb had ordered Young out of her car and a police policy expert.
They never heard from Grubb, whose side of the story was contained in a written statement read into the record by a special agent for the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation. Prosecutors were not able to question Grubb himself in court.