COLUMBUS, Ohio — The jury found Adam Coy, a former Columbus police officer, guilty on three counts for the murder of Andre Hill, a Black man, in 2020. 


What You Need To Know

  • Hill testified that he thought he saw a gun, but ended up realizing it was keys

  • Coy spent 20 years with Columbus police and was let go after the incident

  • Officers at the scene waited 10 minutes to help Hill after he had been shot, body camera footage shows

Coy was found guilty of murder, felonious assault and reckless homicide.

Throughout the trial, Hill testified he fired four times after he spotted what he thought was a silver revolver in the Hill’s hand while Hill was emerging from a dark garage.

Former officer Adam Coy said he rolled over Hill's body, saw a pile of keys and realized there was no gun.

“I knew at that point I made a mistake," Coy told jurors while fighting back tears. "I was horrified. It was the worst night of my life.”

Coy, who served nearly 20 years with the Columbus police force and was fired after the shooting four years ago, testified he thought he was going to die when he mistook the keys for a gun.

Police body camera footage showed Hill coming out of the garage of a friend’s house holding up a cellphone in his left hand, his right hand not visible, seconds before Coy fatally shot him. About 10 minutes passed before officers at the scene began coming to the aid of Hill, who lay bleeding on the garage floor. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.

Weeks after the December 2020 shooting, the mayor forced out the police chief amid a series of high-profile fatal police shootings of Black men and children. Columbus later reached a $10 million settlement with Hill’s family, the largest in city history. The Columbus City Council also passed Andre’s Law, which requires police officers to render immediate medical attention to an injured suspect.

Prosecutors have said Hill had followed the officer’s commands and was never a threat to Coy, who also is charged with reckless homicide and felonious assault and could face up to life in prison if convicted of murder.

Coy had gone to the neighborhood to investigate a resident’s complaint about someone in a running vehicle when he first encountered Hill sitting in an SUV. Hill told Coy he was waiting on a friend to come outside.

The officer said he thought Hill seemed dismissive at first and then suspicious after walking to a house and knocking on the door before entering the garage.

Coy said he lost sight of Hill and suspected he might be trying to break into the house. Coy used a flashlight to spot Hill in the garage and told him to come out and show himself, the officer testified.

When Hill walked toward him, Coy said he could not initially see the man's right hand and then saw what he thought was a revolver. He said he yelled, “Gun! Gun!” and then fired at Hill.

Family and friends said Hill — a father and grandfather — was devoted to his family and was a skilled tradesman who dreamed after years of work as a chef and restaurant manager of one day owning his own restaurant.

Coy had a lengthy history of complaints from residents, with more than three dozen filed against him since he joined the department in 2002, according to his personnel file. A dozen of the complaints were for use of force. All but a few were marked “unfounded” or “not sustained.”

The Franeral Order of Police, Capital City Lodge #9, said it's disappointed with the guilty verdict, saying Coy "acted based on his training."

"We mourn with the community over the tragic loss of Mr. Hill, but we stand firm in our belief that Officer Coy was subject to political and media bias that no one should face in a court of law," said Brian Steele, president of FOP Lodge #9. "Today's outcome reflects this environment, and we urge our community and its leaders to ensure that law enforcement officers receive fair treatment under the law — just as they work to uphold for others."