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Seattle CHOP verdict: City must pay $30.5 million to family of slain teen

caption: Before the jury is allowed in the courtroom, Antonio Mays, Sr. holds a picture of himself and his son, Antonio Mays Jr., in Superior Court at the King County Courthouse Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. Before the jury arrived in the courtroom, the judge requested that he put the picture down so they wouldn’t be influenced by seeing it.
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Before the jury is allowed in the courtroom, Antonio Mays, Sr. holds a picture of himself and his son, Antonio Mays Jr., in Superior Court at the King County Courthouse Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. Before the jury arrived in the courtroom, the judge requested that he put the picture down so they wouldn’t be influenced by seeing it.
Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times

After deliberating for 12 days, a King County jury has found that the city of Seattle was negligent in its emergency response to the fatal shooting of a teenager at the Capitol Hill Organized Protest, or CHOP, in 2020.

Jurors decided to answer “yes” to two questions the court posed to them: whether the city was negligent in its response to the shooting and, if so, whether this negligence caused Antonio Mays Jr.’s death. The city of Seattle will have to pay Antonio Mays Sr., the teen’s father, more than $30.5 million in damages.

The jury awarded about $4 million to the estate of Antonio Mays Jr. and about $26 million to Antonio Mays Sr.

Mays Sr. became emotional and hugged his lawyer as the verdict was announced.

RELATED: Seattle ‘abandoned Antonio Mays Jr.,’ lawyer says

The monthlong civil trial was the first public airing of facts around the June 29, 2020, shooting at CHOP, the protest zone that took over eight square blocks of Capitol Hill and lasted three weeks after Seattle police abandoned their East Precinct during the nationwide racial justice protests following the murder of George Floyd.

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Witnesses in the immediate aftermath of the shooting claimed armed protesters known as “CHOP security” killed the teenager, but no arrests have been made nor charges filed in the five-and-a-half years since Mays’ death. There were signs that deliberations were tense. On Tuesday morning, the second full day of discussions, a juror emerged from the jury room to get coffee.

“It’s getting to the point that I’m going to lose my sanity if I have to be around certain people,” the juror said to the courtroom bailiff.

On Wednesday, the third day of deliberations, jurors asked the judge for more clarity on a legal term — “superseding cause” — signaling they may have wrestled with whether the city’s actions were the cause of Mays’ death.

One day after the shooting that killed Mays and injured another teen, then-Mayor Jenny Durkan issued an executive order declaring the protest an unlawful assembly. The following morning, police reentered the zone, cleared encampments and arrested more than 40 people for failure to disperse or on suspicion of obstruction.

Mays had traveled to Seattle to join the protest after leaving a note for his father explaining he had left their home in Southern California to join in the civil rights movement. He did not tell his father where he was going, only that he wanted to make him “proud.” Mays Sr. filed a missing persons report with the Los Angeles Police Department the same day he found the note.

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caption: Seven months before his death at CHOP, Antonio Mays Jr. and his father worked together to serve up barbecue at the annual Parade of Lights holiday event in Oxnard, Calif. Antonio Sr. captured photos of his son eating smoked oxtail – a favorite of Antonio Jr.’s, he said – and a strawberry shake from another vendor on Dec. 14, 2019.
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Seven months before his death at CHOP, Antonio Mays Jr. and his father worked together to serve up barbecue at the annual Parade of Lights holiday event in Oxnard, Calif. Antonio Sr. captured photos of his son eating smoked oxtail – a favorite of Antonio Jr.’s, he said – and a strawberry shake from another vendor on Dec. 14, 2019.
Courtesy of Antonio Mays Sr.

Less than 10 days later, Mays was dead after being fatally shot in a stolen white Jeep that crashed into CHOP barricades just outside of the abandoned East Precinct.

After he was shot alongside 14-year-old Robert West, who survived, volunteer protest medics attempted to treat the boys’ wounds. Witnesses called 911, but because first responders wouldn’t come to the zone, they decided to transport the boys via private vehicles. One took West to Harborview Medical Center while another attempted to meet with paramedics outside the zone.

RELATED: Victim of unsolved Seattle CHOP killing featured in newly unearthed video

At one point during the trial, jurors were shown video of passengers in the vehicle carrying Mays trying to flag down a city ambulance that drove away from them.

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Attorneys for the city and Mays Sr. presented contradictory testimony from medical experts. Experts for the plaintiff, including a neurosurgeon and pediatric critical care doctor, explained that even though Mays had been shot through the brain, his age and neuroplasticity meant he still stood a chance of survival. The brain injury wasn’t the fatal wound, they said, adding that if his airway had been properly cleared, he could have survived.

A forensic pathologist for the defense, however, argued that Mays’ injuries were so severe that he was unlikely to survive, regardless of whether the city provided more immediate care.

Much of the testimony presented at trial also focused on who Mays was: A hardworking, home-schooled teenager poised to take over his father’s barbecue business. In the years since Mays’ death, the business stopped selling its goods at night markets as a result of Mays Sr.’s grief, according to his testimony.

Mays Sr.’s lawsuit, filed in 2023, originally sought to hold the city accountable for allowing CHOP to form and persist for three weeks, taking aim at Durkan, former Police Chief Carmen Best and other officials. However, before the case got to trial, King County Superior Court Judge Sean O’Donnell threw out those arguments and removed those defendants, narrowing the case to a question of whether the city failed in its emergency response.

RELATED: New Seattle CHOP videos contradict city’s narrative in unsolved killing

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This story has been updated to accurately report that the city of Seattle must pay the family of Antonio Mays Jr. $30.5 million.

This is a developing story.

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