Misdemeanor charge dismissed against Akron teen who was shot by police officer

The video from Akron Police Officer Ryan Westlake's body came shows what happened when he tried to stop 15-year-old Tavion Koonce-Williams after a dog-walker reported that someone was pointing a gun at houses. In the first frame, as Westlake emerges from his police cruiser, he asks
Tavion, "Can I see your hands real quick?"
The video from Akron Police Officer Ryan Westlake's body came shows what happened when he tried to stop 15-year-old Tavion Koonce-Williams after a dog-walker reported that someone was pointing a gun at houses. In the first frame, as Westlake emerges from his police cruiser, he asks Tavion, "Can I see your hands real quick?"

A facsimile firearm charge filed against Tavion Koonce-Williams, who was shot by an Akron police officer last month, was dismissed Monday morning pending further investigation by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation.

Summit County prosecutors asked for the case to be dismissed during a preliminary trial hearing. Summit County Juvenile Court Judge Linda Teodosio approved the motion, dismissing the charge without prejudice — which means the charge could be reintroduced depending on the conclusion of the BCI investigation.

“Pursuing charges at this time against Mr. Koonce-Williams could undermine the independence of BCI’s investigation,” Prosecutor Elliot Kolkovich said. “Charging decisions should only be made after the completion of a thorough review of the incident by independent investigators.”

Tavion, 15 of Akron, was shot in the wrist by an Akron police officer on April 1 after police received a non-emergency call about a man pointing a gun at homes in the Goodyear Heights neighborhood.

Immediately after being shot, Tavion repeatedly yelled that the gun was a fake before he was arrested. Ryan Westlake, the officer who wounded Tavion, had previously been fired and then rehired by the city after violent incidents both on and off the job.

Tavion is represented by attorney Imokhai Okolo, who has accused the city and police department of pursuing the facsimile firearm charge as a way to avoid civil liability and shield themselves from political backlash.

Bryce Buyakie covers courts and public safety for the Beacon Journal. He can be reached by email at bbuyakie@gannett.com or on X, formerly known as Twitter, @bryce_buyakie.

This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Fake gun charge dismissed against Akron teen who was shot by police

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