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Sonya Massey was killed by bullet to the head less than an hour after calling 911, autopsy shows

The 36-year-old mother of two was shot dead a mere 32 minutes after letting cops inside her home

Justin Rohrlich
Friday 26 July 2024 14:12 EDT
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Sonya Massey called police because she thought she heard an intruder. Minutes later, she lay dying on her kitchen floor
Sonya Massey called police because she thought she heard an intruder. Minutes later, she lay dying on her kitchen floor (Illinois State Police)

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Sonya Massey, an unarmed Black woman who suffered from mental illness, was shot dead by police in Illinois less than an hour after calling 911 for help, and a mere 32 minutes after letting officers into her home.

Thatā€™s according to an autopsy report released Friday by the Sangamon County Coronerā€™s Office, which confirmed the 36-year-old mother of two died from a bullet wound to the head earlier this month.

Massey dialed 911 at 12:49 a.m. on July 6, and said she was hearing strange noises outside her home in Springfield, about 200 miles southwest of Chicago. Officers arrived to investigate, finding nothing suspicious in Masseyā€™s yard.

Massey let them inside at 1:15 a.m., after which things soon went awry. Amid a chaotic interaction involving a pot of water heating up on the stove, now-terminated Sangamon County sheriffā€™s deputy Sean Graysonā€”who had worked for six different law enforcement agencies in the past four years and was discharged from the U.S. Army after 21 months for ā€œserious,ā€ but unspecified, misconductā€”Grayson fired three shots at Massey, who immediately crumpled to the floor.

Sonya Massey was shot in the face after calling 911 for help
Sonya Massey was shot in the face after calling 911 for help (Courtesy Ben Crump Law via AP)

The lethal round slammed into Masseyā€™s face beneath her left eye, states the report by forensic pathologist Nathaniel Patterson, M.D. It then perforated her left cheekbone, passed through the muscle tissue surrounding the base of the skull, and tore through Masseyā€™s carotid artery, exiting through the back of her neck, according to the report. Massey also received ā€œminor blunt force injuries of the right legā€ during the deadly encounter.

Her manner of death was listed as a homicide. Medical examiners found ā€œno soot or gunpowder stippling on the skin,ā€ meaning the round was fired from a distance, not at extremely close range, which would tend to leave behind a telltale deposit of unburned gunpowder particles.

The official time of death is listed as 1:47 a.m.

Sonya Massey was shot just below the left eye, with the round exiting through the back of her neck, according to the Sangamon County Coronerā€™s Office
Sonya Massey was shot just below the left eye, with the round exiting through the back of her neck, according to the Sangamon County Coronerā€™s Office (Sangamon County Coroner)

In bodycam footage recorded by Graysonā€™s partner, whose name has not been publicly released, Grayson can be heard discouraging him from going outside to get his medical kit, telling him, ā€œItā€™s a headshotā€¦ thereā€™s nothing we can do.ā€

At one point, an officerā€”it is unclear whose voice it isā€”is heard telling the radio dispatcher that Masseyā€™s wound was ā€œself-inflicted.ā€

Graysonā€™s bodycam was off during the interaction with Massey; he reportedly didnā€™t turn it on until after the shooting. His employment with the Sangamon County Sheriffā€™s Office was terminated July 17 following his indictment on first-degree murder charges. Since the shooting itā€™s emerged that Grayson twice pleaded guilty to DUI and was accused in divorce papers by his ex-wife of ā€œextreme and repeated mental cruelty.ā€

ā€œThe actions taken by Deputy Grayson do not reflect the values and training of the Sangamon County Sheriffā€™s Office or law enforcement as a whole,ā€ Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell said in a July 17 statement. ā€œGood law enforcement officers stand with our community in condemning actions that undermine the trust and safety we strive to uphold.ā€

Former Sangamon County Deputy Sean Grayson is now facing first-degree murder charges.
Former Sangamon County Deputy Sean Grayson is now facing first-degree murder charges. (Sangamon County Sheriff's Office)

The Department of Justice has opened its own investigation into the shooting. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump is representing Sonya Masseyā€™s family as they navigate the harrowing aftermath of her death.

At a press conference on Friday, Crump went over Graysonā€™s checkered work history and DUI convictions, asking how so many apparent red flags were overlooked and questioned how he got hired by Sangamon County in the first place.

ā€œHow do you even have a driverā€™s license, much less get a job as a sheriffā€™s deputy?ā€ Crump said. ā€œ[There are] many questions to be answered.ā€

In a statement after Massey was killed, vice president and presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris said, ā€œSonya Massey deserved to be safe. The disturbing footage released yesterday confirms what we know from the lived experiences of so many ā€” we have much work to do to ensure that our justice system fully lives up to its name.ā€

Grayson has pleaded not guilty.

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