Hundreds of furious protesters have marched through the Ohio city where pregnant woman Ta’Kiya Young was shot dead by a cop last month.
Demonstrators made speeches in Goodale Park, central Columbus, on Sunday before chanting ‘black lives matter’ as they walked the streets to demand justice for the 21-year-old mother-of-two.
Cops approached Young while she was in her car at a Kroger parking lot on August 24 because they believed she had been shoplifting, though the family’s lawyer denies she was involved in theft.
Shocking bodycam footage shows the moment one officer shoots through the front windshield – killing Young and her unborn child – as her car began to roll slowly towards him.
The horrific incident in Blendon Township, northern Columbus, has caused an uproar in the local community and beyond.
Ta’Kiya Young, 21, was pregnant when she was fatally shot by a cop while sat in her car in a Kroger parking lot at Blendon Township, northern Columbus, Ohio, on August 24
Hundreds of furious protesters marched through Columbus, Ohio, on Sunday night – the same city where mother-of-two Young was killed last month
Young’s 7th grade high school teacher Malissa Thomas St Clair (pictured) paid tribute to her as a pupil with a ‘beautiful smile’ and ‘bright brown eyes’ who ‘didn’t get a chance to develop’
Hundreds of people rallied together in Goodale Park at 6pm for a protest organized by the People’s Justice Project.
Among the speakers were Young’s high school teacher, Malissa Thomas St Clair, who remembered her as a pupil who would always ‘put a smile on your face’.
‘She always said good morning Miss St Clair, how’s your day going today Miss St Clair, who got on your nerves today Miss St Clair,’ the 48-year-old Columbus-born teacher recalled.
‘She put a smile on your face with her chocolate skin, her beautiful smile, her bright brown eyes.’
Thomas St Clair told the crowd she almost didn’t speak because she felt ‘so angry’ about the loss of the ’21-year-old who didn’t get a chance to develop’.
She also slammed people who have claimed she ‘used her vehicle as a weapon’ against the officer who shot her.
‘That vehicle was going no more than 2 miles an hour,’ she said. ‘That man (the cop) wouldn’t have died from that miles per hour.
‘She was getting out of the way because she knew she was going to die. She was trying to save her daughter’s life.
‘Ta’Kiya Young was murdered. Ta’Kiya Young’s baby was murdered.’
Several more speakers took to the stage, including event organizer Raman Obey, who blasted ‘police violence’.
‘We’re out here because people have lost their lives due to police escalation, police militarization and overall police violence,’ he said.
Young was a mother to two young children and she was pregnant when she died. Her unborn child was also killed in the shooting
‘And that added pressure of being pregnant – I can’t even begin to imagine what she was thinking at that time… but it’s not until that second police stepped in front of that car that it turned into a tragedy.
‘That baby’s last words were, “are you going to shoot me?’”
Another organizer, Emily Cole, pointed out that the cop who shot Young has not yet been named or arrested.
‘They [police officers] get to hide their name and not face the community,’ she said.
‘These families get no justice, no accountability and they can’t even sue because of qualified immunity.’
After the park protest, the demonstrators’ numbers swelled as they took to the streets chanting ‘black lives matter’ and ‘no justice, no peace’.
Many carried banners bearing Young’s name along with others killed by cops in America.
Young’s family has called for the cop responsible for her death to be arrested, their attorney Sean Walton has said.
Organizers of the Sunday protest Raman Obey (right) and Emily Cole (left) made impassioned speeches on stage at Goodale Park on Sunday before protesters marched on the streets
Shocking bodycam footage shows the moment one officer shoots through the front windshield – killing Young and her unborn child – as her car began to roll slowly towards him
Walton said the bodycam video clearly shows that the shooting was unjustified.
‘The video did nothing but confirm their fears that Ta’Kiya was murdered unjustifiably…and it was just heartbreaking for them to see Ta’Kiya having her life taken away under such ridiculous circumstances,’ Walton told AP.
‘Ta’Kiya’s family is heartbroken.’