The family of Sonya Massey is calling for a probe into the hiring of a sheriff’s deputy charged with fatally shooting the 36-year-old Black woman in her Illinois home this month, citing their concerns over records showing he’d worked at six law enforcement agencies in four years and was charged with driving under the influence twice.
Sean Grayson, the 30-year-old Sangamon County sheriff’s deputy who has since been fired from the agency, was indicted by a grand jury on July 17 on three counts of first-degree murder and one count each of aggravated battery with a firearm and official misconduct in connection with the July 6 shooting at Massey’s home near Springfield.
He has entered a not guilty plea and was denied pretrial release, according to court records. During his July 18 arraignment hearing, Sangamon County Judge Ryan Cadagin said: “Not only is there clear and convincing evidence that he has committed a detention-eligible offense, there is clear and convincing evidence that he is a risk to the community.”
The state’s training and standards board records show Grayson’s law enforcement certification has been suspended.
Grayson’s attorney revealed at his arraignment that the former deputy is diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer and was hospitalized late last year for a month and a half to undergo a colostomy. The attorney also mentioned Grayson owns a home where he lives with his fiancée, whom he is set to marry in October.
CNN has sought comment from Grayson’s attorney.
Massey is one of a number of Black women who have been killed by police in their own homes in recent years, including Breonna Taylor and Atatiana Jefferson.
In a news conference Monday afternoon, civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents Massey’s family, connected her death to other cases of police violence against Black people across the US.
Here’s what we know about the former sheriff’s deputy charged with murder in Massey’s death:
Records: Deputy worked at 6 agencies in 4 years, after being charged twice with DUI
Grayson enrolled in the US Army in 2013 and served for three years, according to his attorney. He was discharged due to “misconduct (serious offense),” according to a Department of Defense document included in Grayson’s personnel file during his time with Kincaid police in Illinois.
The document says Grayson was separated from the Army under a general discharge after he served as a private first class at Fort Riley in Kansas. The file did not detail the alleged misconduct.
Grayson had worked at six law enforcement agencies in Illinois since 2020, according to the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board. He was hired at all six departments after being charged with two DUI misdemeanor offenses in Illinois’ Macoupin County – one in 2015 and the other in 2016, court records show.
He began working part-time with Pawnee police in August 2020, then moved to the Kincaid and Virden police departments, before taking up full-time work with Auburn police, the Logan County Sheriff’s Office and – in May 2023 – Sangamon County.
Grayson’s personnel files also revealed several deficiencies in his workplace performance, training and skill set at agencies where he previously worked. Chief Steven Snodgrass at the Virden Police Department said Grayson “did not demonstrate good officer safety skills.” Chief Dave Campbell at the Auburn Police Department said he thinks Grayson “needs more training.” Grayson’s co-worker at the Logan County Sheriff’s Office also said he “believes (Grayson) needs more extensive training.”
Grayson’s psychological evaluation for employment at the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office noted that Grayson “knows he can move too fast at times” and that “he needs to slow down to make good decisions,” but ultimately concluded that “overall, he appears to be a suitable fit for the position.”
Grayson’s resignation letter from the Auburn Police Department, reviewed by CNN, did not suggest he left due to problems or disciplinary issues. In it, he wrote: “I have had nothing but a positive experience working as an officer. Unfortunately, I have chosen to move on to Logan County Sheriff’s Office.”
Records from the Logan County Sheriff’s Office, meanwhile, said he needed to take “high stress decision making classes.” The recommendation came after Grayson failed to slow down after his boss called off a vehicle pursuit. Grayson was driving about 110 mph before striking a deer, the records say.
Grayson was pressed about the particulars of the chase by Logan County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Nathan Miller in November 2022, audio recordings revealed, in which the deputy chief told Grayson his report could have amounted to “official misconduct” and constituted several policy violations.
Grayson said he believed he was on a different street that he referenced in his report. “If we can’t trust what you say and what you see, we can’t have you in our uniform,” Miller told Grayson, according to the recordings.
“I’m getting goosebumps. This is extremely concerning,” the chief deputy said a few minutes later. “Everybody likes you. I gotta be able to trust you. Was this a purposefully done lie?”
“No,” Grayson responded, according to the recordings.
Grayson’s first DUI incident occurred in August 2015, when Grayson’s vehicle was impounded after he was charged with driving under the influence. He pleaded guilty to the charge and paid more than $1,320 in fines, according to court records. Another charge, accusing him of driving under the influence with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08%, was dismissed.
The following year in July, Grayson was charged again with DUI, pleaded guilty and paid more than $2,400 in fines, court records show.
Grayson’s job application to Auburn police acknowledges he had previously been arrested and charged with a DUI. Grayson wrote the sheriff of Logan County a brief letter when he started working at the sheriff’s department in May 2022, detailing his “terrible decision to drink and drive.” His letter also said he lost his driving privileges for one year after pleading guilty to his second DUI in 2016.
A petition calling for an investigation into why Sangamon County hired Grayson was circulated at a march and barbecue in Springfield on Monday night, CNN affiliate WICS reported.
Massey’s family and their lawyers called for the county to investigate the decision to hire him, voicing concerns about his arrest record and his working for six departments in four years, according to WICS.
‘I’ll f**king shoot you in the f**king face,’ deputy says before Massey is shot
The Illinois State Police on Monday released 36-minutes of video that includes body-camera footage from each of the two Sangamon County sheriff’s deputies who responded to Massey’s house early on July 6. Massey had called 911 to report a possible “prowler” at her home in Springfield, according to a court document filed by prosecutors.
The body-camera footage shows Grayson and another deputy speaking calmly with Massey in her home – at which point she goes to the stove to turn off a pot of boiling water. She then picks up the pot and the other deputy steps back, “away from your hot steaming water,” he says.
“I rebuke you in the name of Jesus,” she says in response.
“Huh?” the deputy says.
“I rebuke you in the name of Jesus,” she repeats.
“You better f**king not or I swear to God I’ll f**king shoot you in the f**king face,” Grayson says.
He then draws his firearm and points it at her, and she ducks and says, “I’m sorry” while lifting the pot, the video shows.
“Drop the f**king pot!” both deputies yell.
Three shots are heard. After a few seconds of silence, one deputy says, “shots fired” and calls for emergency medical services.
“Dude, I’m not taking f**king boiling water to the f**king head. And look, it came right to our feet, too,” Grayson says.
Minutes after the shooting, Grayson speaks to another law enforcement figure. “She had boiling water and came at me with boiling water,” he says in the video. “She said she was going to rebuke me in the name of Jesus and came at (me) with boiling water.”
Grayson did not activate his body camera until after he fatally shot Massey, according to charging documents. The other deputy had activated his body camera when he first arrived at the scene, the documents state.
In the body-camera footage, Grayson tells his partner that Massey would not need medical help immediately after the shooting.
The other deputy says he’s going to get a medical kit to help, but Grayson responds, “Nah, she’s done. You can go get it but that’s a headshot.”
Grayson later goes to his vehicle to get his own medical supplies. When he gets back to the house, he asks if there’s anything he can do, but is told no.
“All right, I’m not even gonna waste my med stuff then,” Grayson says.
Next, Grayson leaves the house and speaks to a group of law enforcement officers outside. “Yeah, I’m good, this f**king b*tch is crazy,” he says, according to the footage.
During Grayson’s arraignment, the judge said Grayson’s “disparaging remarks” about Massey and his direction to the other officer not to give her aid justified the denial of his pretrial release.
“Simply no longer working as a police officer or home confinement or electronic monitoring or any other conditions that are oftentimes used cannot sufficiently mitigate the threat of someone who acted in this way,” the judge said, according to court transcripts.
Officials deem deputy’s actions an ‘unjustified use of deadly force’
Since the shooting, local and state officials have criticized the deputy’s actions as an unjustified use of deadly force.
A review of the Illinois State Police investigation into the shooting “does not support a finding that … Grayson was justified in his use of deadly force,” the state’s attorney for Sangamon County, John Milhiser, said in a July 17 news release.
In a court document filed by the state last week, prosecutors said a “use-of-force” expert had reviewed the body-camera footage and concluded the use of deadly force was not justified.
“(The expert) likened the scenario to an officer intentionally and unnecessarily putting himself in front of a moving vehicle and then justifying use of force because of fear of being struck,” the prosecutors wrote.
The sheriff’s office said it has fired Grayson. “It is clear that the deputy did not act as trained or in accordance with our standards,” the office said.
In a court document filed by the state last week, prosecutors noted Grayson could have drawn a Taser located on his duty vest.
“He … has shown a willingness to use lethal force, despite the availability of non-deadly alternatives, when there is little to no threat to his bodily safety,” prosecutors wrote.
In April 2021, Grayson was awarded a certificate for successfully completing a training course on how to use a Taser, according to documents obtained by CNN from the Auburn Police Department, his previous employer. He was also successfully trained on how to use pepper spray, the documents show.
Massey’s father, James Wilburn, said during a news conference Monday he initially received conflicting information from law enforcement.
“I was under the impression that a prowler had broken in and killed my baby. Never did they say that it was a deputy-involved shooting until my brother read it on the internet,” Wilburn said.
At the news conference, Crump called her killing “senseless on every level.”
Crump referenced what Grayson said – “I’ll f**king shoot you in the f**king face” – before Massey was shot.
“Black women don’t get the consideration and the respect in America,” Crump said.
CNN’s Lucy Kafanov, Eric Levenson, Jillian Sykes, Raja Razek, Sarah Dewberry, Brad Parks and Andy Rose contributed to this report.