Family of Gregory Vaughn Hill Jr. Seeks Justice After Sheriff's Deputies Penalized $4 in Controversial Killing
Family of Gregory Vaughn Hill Jr. Seeks Justice After Sheriff's Deputies Penalized $4 in Controversial Killing
Some four and a half years ago, Florida sheriff’s deputies showed up to the home of Gregory Vaughn Hill Jr.The African-American father of three was a man with an imperfect past. He had several traffic violations on his record—serious violations, according to The New York Times—and had been drinking long before law enforcement arrived.A neighbor, writes the Times, had heard loud music coming from Hill’s garage. Apparently disturbed, she dialed 911 to report a noise complaint.Two St. Lucie County, Florida, sheriff’s deputies pulled into the drive and approached. The door to Hill’s garage was down—nobody else was around, nobody else was watching.Deputy Christopher Newman says they knocked on the garage door. Hill, intoxicated, drew up the gate, gun in hand. When he saw uniforms on the pavement outside, he immediately closed the barrier back down.Saying he feared for his life and that Hill posed an imminent threat to himself and a colleague, Newman opened fire. Three bullets tore through the door. One hit Hill in the head; the other two passed through his abdomen.The two deputies didn’t enter the home—they called for backup. Within minutes, a SWAT team arrived on the scene, robot in tow. The machine, outfitted with a camera, pierced the garage door and took pictures of the scene within.Only then, writes the Times, did deputies realize the 30-year old man was dead on the ground, an unloaded pistol in his back pocket.The strange circumstances—a man shot dead through a garage door over a noise complaint—prompted an inquiry. Neither the St. Lucie County Sheriff, Ken Mascara, nor the local prosecutor found evidence of wrongdoing.Newman and his colleague, Edward Lopez, say Hill opened the garage door, gun in hand. But Hill’s family points to crime scene photographs—the father of three dead on the ground, the butt of a 9mm pistol protruding from pocket.Hill’s fiancée and mother sued, claiming that Newman likely didn’t notice the firearm. They say the deputy was spooked by the sound of the garage door closing—and that there’s no way Gregory Vaughn Hill could have slammed the gate and placed the pistol in his rear pocket before Deputy Newman started shooting.
Image via Pixabay/user:zgmorris13. Public domain.
Sources
Deputies say Gregory Hill pointed gun at them. After shooting, the gun was found in his pocketJury Leaves $4 to Family of Man Killed by Sheriff’s Deputy, Along With Many Questions
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.