(CNN) โ An Illinois woman was fatally shot inside her home this month by a sheriffโs deputy who responded to her 911 call, and the deputy is now charged with murder in the case, a prosecutor said this week.
Sonya Massey, 36, called 911 on July 6 because she thought an intruder was in her home in the Springfield area, according to the law office of Ben Crump, the civil rights attorney representing her family.
Sangamon County sheriffโs Deputy Sean Grayson and another deputy responded to the call around 12:50 a.m., authorities said. Eventually, as the deputies were in Masseyโs home to gather information and make sure the residence was safe, a dispute arose over a pot of hot water, and Grayson drew his gun and eventually fired three times toward her, striking her once in the face, according to a court document filed Thursday by Sangamon County prosecutors.

During the dispute before the shooting, Massey at one point apologized with her hands up, and Grayson at another point also yelled at her to put the pot down, prosecutors said in the document. The sheriffโs office said the deputies, who were not injured, reported the shooting around 1:20 a.m. Crumpโs office has said Massey was unarmed.
An Illinois State Police investigation of the case did โnot support a finding that โฆ Grayson was justified in his use of deadly force,โ the stateโs attorney for the county, John Milhiser, said in a Wednesday news release.
A Sangamon County grand jury on Wednesday indicted Grayson on three counts of first-degree murder and a count each of aggravated battery with a firearm and official misconduct, Milhiser said.
At his arraignment Thursday, Grayson entered a not guilty plea and was denied pretrial release, according to court records. A pretrial hearing is scheduled for August 26.
CNN reached out Saturday to Graysonโs attorney, who declined to comment.
The sheriffโs department has fired Grayson, the office said Wednesday.
Crump said in a release last week that it was โextremely hard to imagine how a woman who calls police out of fear of an intruder ends up shot โฆ by the police in her own home.โ
On Wednesday, Crump said the charges marked โan important milestone in the pursuit of justice for Sonya Masseyโs family.โ
โThis news is a step toward justice for Sonyaโs loved ones, especially her children, who have endured unimaginable pain and suffering since they were notified of this tragedy. We remain committed to uncovering the truth of what happened and identifying the failures that allowed this tragic death to occur,โ Crump said in a Wednesday release.
Masseyโs funeral will be held Friday morning, according to Crumpโs office.
How the shooting unfolded, according to prosecutors
Massey called 911 to report a possible โprowler,โ according to the document that prosecutors filed in a court in Springfield on Thursday.
When the two responding deputies encountered Massey, she โappeared to be calm, perhaps unwell, not aggressive,โ the court document said.
After entering Masseyโs home, Grayson โnoticed a pot on the stove, and approved of Massey removing the pot to prevent any accidental fires.โ The pot โapparently contained heated water,โ the court document says.
What happened next is unclear.
Massey set the pot down on a counter in the kitchen, according to the document.
Grayson, who was in the living room, then โdrew his 9mm firearm and threatened to shoot Ms. Massey in the face,โ according to the document.
โSeeing the drawn weapon, Ms. Massey put her hands in the air and stated, โIโm sorry,โ while ducking for cover behind the counter that separated her and the defendant,โ the document says.
โWith his firearm still drawn, Grayson went closer to Massey and aggressively yelled at her to put the pot down.โ
Then, Grayson shot Massey in the face, according to the court document.
It wasnโt until after Grayson fatally shot Massey that he activated his body camera, the document says. The other deputy, who was checking the house while the dispute over the pot happened, had activated his body camera when he first arrived on scene, according to the court document.
Grayson instructed the other deputy not to retrieve a medical kit โbecause of the severity of the injury,โ according to the court document. The other deputy still rendered aid and stayed with Massey until medics arrived. Grayson โat no time attempted to render aid,โ the document said. Massey was taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead, the sheriffโs department has said.
The court document does not explain how prosecutors got details of the incident, but it asks the court to refer to the deputiesโ body camera recordings, which prosecutors submitted as an exhibit. The document also does not explain where the other deputy was within the house when the dispute and the shooting happened.
Body camera footage to be publicly released next week
Masseyโs family saw body camera footage of the incident during a meeting with prosecutors and state police on Wednesday, Milhiser said that day.
After consulting with the family, officials decided the footage will be released publicly on Monday afternoon, the prosecutor said. Nothing has been redacted โexcept for the blurring of certain imagesโ out of respect, Milhiser said.
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker expressed gratitude Wednesday to prosecutors for bringing the โappropriate chargesโ in this case.
โSonya Massey was concerned for her safety and called law enforcement to her home for protection. Like all Illinoisans, she deserved that protection. Instead, innocent and unarmed, she was gunned down by an officer of the law,โ Pritzker said Wednesday in a news release.
โMy heart breaks for Sonyaโs children, for her family and friends and for all who knew and loved her, and I am enraged that another innocent Black woman had her life taken from her at the hands of a police officer,โ the governor said.
The sheriffโs office said Wednesday that Graysonโs actions โdo not reflect the values and training of the Sangamon County Sheriffโs Office or law enforcement as a whole,โ and that it was โclear that the deputy did not act as trained or in accordance with our standards.โ
โGood law enforcement officers stand with our community in condemning actions that undermine the trust and safety we strive to uphold. In times like these, it is crucial for leadership across all sides and spectrums to come together to heal our community,โ the office said in an online post.
CNNโs Jamiel Lynch and Rebekah Riess contributed to this report.
The-CNN-Wire
โข & ยฉ 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.