Case of man shot to death by undercover deputy while house sitting could go to grand jury soon

Monday, April 26, 2021
Case of Harris County deputy who killed man may go to grand jury
It's been one year since 35-year-old Joshua Johnson was killed by an undercover Harris County deputy, and his family still has a lot of unanswered questions.

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- It has been one year since 35-year-old Joshua Johnson was shot and killed by an undercover deputy with the Gulf Coast Task Force.

The case could go to a grand jury this week, but Johnson's family still has unanswered questions about what happened the night he was killed.

Johnson was shot and killed by an undercover deputy on April 22, 2020. At the time of his death, Johnson was reportedly watching a neighbor's home on East Ritter Circle while she was in the hospital.

At the same time, the deputy was staking out a murder suspect from Dallas County in the area.

Around 6 a.m. that day, officials said Johnson approached the unmarked unit with the flashlight on his phone turned on and a BB gun in his hand. They said words were exchanged, Johnson lowered his flashlight, raised his BB gun at the deputy and the deputy fired at least two shots outside of his window.

The sheriff's office said the BB gun looked like a Glock handgun.

Neither a body camera nor a dash camera was used by the deputy in question, according to officials, because he was working undercover.

Johnson's parents have maintained they believe their son might have been killed in a case of mistaken identity.

Now a year later, they continue to have the same questions: why and how did this happen?

"We haven't had the transparency that we expected, we can't get the ballistics report," said Congressman Al Green, who also made a renewed plea for charges in the case last May. "They want to know what happened to their son. They want to know what that ballistic report says. They want to know what that recommendation from the state was."

Johnson's family says they've gotten few answers from law enforcement.

"We want the case presented to a grand jury. We want to know what happens when the grand jury hears this case, and we want to know what happened in terms of the evidence that's presented," Green said.

SEE ALSO:

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Family questions facts in shooting death of son by Harris County Sheriff's deputy

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