KYLE ADKINS WAS leaving his parents’ house in Kincaid, a small village in central Illinois’ Christian County, to pick up his young children from their mother’s house just a few blocks away on the night of May 8, 2021.

Kincaid police officer Sean Grayson pulled him over — but he wasn’t sure why.

Grayson told Adkins there was a warrant out for his arrest and issued him a “notice to appear,” a document equivalent to an arrest, recommending felony drug charges against him. The case dragged out for two years before it was dropped, and a new investigation reveals the warrant — and other evidence Grayson said he had against Adkins — never actually existed. Body camera footage shows Grayson admitting to the chief of police he had no evidence to recommend charges, but even after the footage surfaced in court, no other department or agency was notified.

Grayson, now 30, would go on to work at four other police departments across central Illinois, the last being the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office, where he would fatally shoot and kill Sonya Massey, 36, in her home in July 2024 after she called the police for help. Grayson shot at Massey, an unarmed Black woman whose family had called police with concerns about her mental health, three times, hitting her once in the head. He’s since been charged with murdering her.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    12
    ·
    3 months ago

    The video of the shooting is so bizarre. I can’t understand how it escalated for him. Like, I can usually see what a cop’s motivation is even if I think it’s wrong. But for this guy, it’s as though being told, “I don’t like you,” was interpreted as a physical threat. It’s just incomprehensible.

    Glad he’s been charged.

    • Signtist@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      10
      ·
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      A lot of cops are so high strung that you essentially have to pretend you’re having the time of your life while interacting with them - any nervousness or annoyance is taken to mean that you’re potentially a violent criminal who could kill them at any moment.

      Just the realization that a woman holding a pot of hot water could hypothetically use it as a weapon, however unlikely it was in this scenario, was enough to make him instinctively shoot with only minor notice that still did nothing to prevent him from killing her even as she began cowering and apologizing.

      This is the culture we’ve allowed the police to build in this country; the job is dangerous, and they’re only human, so they believe they should be forgiven for being scared regardless of the situation, and should be forgiven for taking drastic measures while they’re scared.

  • orcrist@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    10
    ·
    3 months ago

    For cops, lying is a virtue. It gets them promoted. I think the other dirty cops, which is the majority, want to know they have someone dishonest to cover their backs. Certainly many of the non-cop bosses want people who will bend and break the law as needed.