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[Spam] Ohio officer found not guilty of murder in niggeress Ta'Kiya Young's shooting death

From anonymous <liealot@gxm32.com>
Message-ID <20251122.100354.f993c15c@msgid.frell.theremailer.net> (permalink)
Newsgroups oh.general, alt.niggers, alt.law-enforcement, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
Date 2025-11-22 10:03 +0100
Subject [Spam] Ohio officer found not guilty of murder in niggeress Ta'Kiya Young's shooting death

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A seven month pregnant black whore stealing booze to drink.  No wonder
blacks are so fucked up and brain-damaged.  Justice has been served. 

A jury found an Ohio police officer not guilty of murder on Friday in
the 2023 shooting death of a 21-year-old pregnant Black woman who was
suspected of shoplifting. 

Connor Grubb of the Blendon Township Police Department was cleared of
murder, involuntary manslaughter and felonious assault in Ta'Kiya
Young's death. 

Body camera footage showed Grubb shooting Young on Aug. 24, 2023 while
she drove her vehicle in Grubb's direction after she allegedly stole
liquor from a Kroger grocery store. 

Young was seven months pregnant at the time of the incident in the store
parking lot in Blendon Township, Ohio, her grandmother told ABC News in
a 2023 interview. Her unborn child also died. 

Nadine Young, Ta'Kiya Young's grandmother, was visibly distraught and
could be heard crying and yelling in the courtroom after the verdict. 

"It's not right," Nadine Young said before she was escorted out of the
courtroom. "He's walking away free. It's not right." 

Sean Walton Jr., Ta'Kiya Young's family attorney, said in a press
conference after the verdict that even though he was disappointed, he
did not blame the jury. 

"The jury didn't do anything wrong here," Walton said. "Connor Grubb is
the one who pulled the trigger; Connor Grubb is the one who has us all
here right now." 

After the verdict, Grubb hugged his attorneys and walked out of the
court room with his family after getting the judge's permission. 

"On behalf of Connor, his family, they thank all the jurors for their
service," Mark Collins, Grubb's attorney, said at a press conference
after the verdict. "He took a life on duty and realized another's life
after that. To walk around with that -- and that is a difficult
situation." 

Grubb did not attend the press conference. 

Ta'Kiya Young's family released a statement obtained by ABC News on
Friday saying that they will pursue a civil lawsuit but did not specify
when or who the suit will be against. 

"Our civil case will prove what the jury could not find beyond a
reasonable doubt," the family said in their statement. "We will show
that Grubb created the danger by positioning himself in front of her
vehicle with his weapon drawn." 

After Friday's verdict, Collins sent a statement to ABC News saying that
laws need to be changed to allow a grand jury to hear evidence about
reasons why force is used in cases like these. 

"If the grand jury that handed up this indictment had heard from
Connor's defense team the law and evidence that show his actions were
justified, he likely never would have been indicted," Collins said in
the statement. 

During closing arguments on Wednesday, Erin Claypool of the Montgomery
County Prosecutor's Office said that Grubb knew his actions would cause
Young to suffer serious physical harm. 

Claypool said that the Blendon Township Police Department has guidelines
that instruct officers to take reasonable steps to move out of the path
of an approaching vehicle instead of discharging their firearm at the
vehicle. 

Collins, Grubb's defense attorney, began his closing argument by stating
that Young's death was extremely tragic and sad, but it was up to the
jury to put emotions aside and only address the facts. 

"When you walk out of this courtroom to go to the jury room, the law and
justice demands to be set aside that sympathy, no matter how difficult
that is," Collins said. 

Grubb's defense asserted that Ta'Kiya Young's car carried deadly force
when she drove towards the officer, making his use of force "objectively
reasonable." 

Collins claimed in his closing argument that the prosecution's case was
weak, and reliant on the testimony of two paid expert witnesses. 

"Their basic case, ladies and gentlemen, is to take a video showing life
saving measures, take a photo of an unborn fetus, wrap that together
with two professional second guessers," Collins said. 

The prosecution noted in rebuttal that Erick Moynihan, the officer who
was with Grubb during the incident, said during his trial testimony that
he was not expecting for Grubb to fire his weapon. 

"Sergeant Moynihan told us that he himself did not perceive Ms. Young to
be a threat at all," the prosecution said. "He didn't even have his
weapon drawn. He stated that it surprised him when he heard the sound of
a gunshot. He said, 'I wasn't expecting that.'" 

The prosecutor said during rebuttal that Grubb had "motivation" to
convince the jury he was in fear of his life because then he would
allegedly not be accountable for the death of Ta'Kiya Young and her
unborn child. 

"How many of us are really surprised that in his (Grubb's) written
statement, he writes that he fired his weapon because he believed that
he was in imminent danger of death?" the prosecution said. "What would
you expect him to say after he shot and killed someone and terminated
their pregnancy?" 

At the defense's request, Franklin County Common Pleas Judge David Young
dismissed two counts of felonious assault and two counts of felony
murder on Ta'Kiya Young's unborn child on Tuesday. The judge said there
was no evidence that Grubb knew Ta'Kiya Young was pregnant at the time
of the shooting. 

Grubb said in a statement read by the prosecution during the trial that
he pointed his gun at Ta'Kiya Young after she failed to comply with his
partner's commands to get out of the vehicle. He said he felt the car
strike his legs and start to lift his body off the ground. 

Body camera video shows Ta'Kiya Young refusing to leave the car despite
orders from officers after she was suspected of stealing alcohol from
the Kroger store. Grubb's partner was on the driver's side while Grubb
stood directly in front of the vehicle. 

According to attorneys during the trial, her car was parked in a
disabled parking space with no disability placard on her vehicle.
License plates for the car were not visible. 

Ta'Kiya Young can be heard protesting with the officers in body camera
video during the encounter. The officers can be heard yelling at her to
get out of the vehicle. She asked them, "Are you going to shoot me?" 

The video shows Ta'Kiya Young turned the steering wheel to the right and
rolled forward in an apparent attempt to drive away, Grubb was already
standing in front of the vehicle before the car started moving and fired
a single fatal shot into her chest through her windshield after the
vehicle moved. 

Ta'Kiya Young's vehicle came to a stop against a building shortly after,
as seen on the body camera video. Police said they attempted to give her
life saving aid. Young and her unborn daughter were later pronounced
dead at a hospital. 

"Ta'Kiya's life mattered," the family said in their statement released
after the verdict on Friday. "Her daughter's life mattered. And we will
prove it." 

https://abcnews.go.com/US/ohio-officer-found-guilty-murder-takiya-youngs-
shooting/story?id=127684854 

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[Spam] Ohio officer found not guilty of murder in niggeress Ta'Kiya Young's shooting death anonymous <liealot@gxm32.com> - 2025-11-22 10:03 +0100

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