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What we know about the life and death of Frank Tyson

What we know about the life and death of Frank Tyson

CANTON – Frank E. Tyson was 53 years old when he died. Died in Canton police custody on April 18.

He lived with his brother, John, two years his junior, in John’s two-story home on Dietz Avenue NE in Canton Township, a short distance outside the east Canton city limits on Trump Avenue NE.

According to his obituary, Frank Tyson was a 1989 graduate of South Canton High School and accepted Christ at an early age.

“He was an avid reader, especially of newspapers and encyclopedias. Frank enjoyed watching sports and discussing team statistics,” said the memorial published by Rhoden Memorial Home.

He was looking forward to returning to his job as an asphalt worker, fighting to clear his name of the charges for which he was imprisoned, and spending time with his family and Sibrena Jones, his life partner of 25 years. according to his obituary.

He was preceded in death by his parents Thad “Junebug” Tyson and Mamie Lou (West) Tyson and brothers Rickey, Benjamin and Donald. He is survived by brothers Melvin, Darren and John.

Frank Tyson spent twenty years in prison

One press conference Frank Tyson came from a good family, raised by a stay-at-home mother and a father who taught his sons to work, his cousin Ronald Simmons said at the ceremony following his death.

Frank Tyson was constantly in trouble with the law. At the time of his death, he was wanted for an alleged parole violation after completing a 24-year sentence imposed in 2000 for kidnapping, burglary, failure to comply with a police officer’s order, receiving stolen property and grand larceny. of a motor vehicle.

In that case, investigators said he crashed a stolen truck onto the Republic Technologies International property, then stole another truck. The driver led Ohio State Highway Patrol troopers and Stark County sheriff’s deputies on another chase before crashing the truck into a utility pole and four parked vehicles, wrecking it and causing one car to crash into a home.

Witnesses said Tyson abandoned the vehicle and eventually entered an occupied home on Second Street NE, where prosecutors say he grabbed an 11-year-old girl and held her as a shield to force her to lower her gun before a trooper pursuing her threw the girl away. He attacked a 1-year-old girl.

The police officer and a resident of the home were then able to wrestle him to the ground, allowing police to arrest him. The older girl was not physically injured, but the younger child had to be hospitalized.

Tyson maintained his innocence in the case and continued to appeal his conviction while behind bars for years.

What happened the night Frank Tyson died at an AMVETS club in Canton?

Investigators say Frank Tyson crashed a Chevrolet Malibu into a utility pole in the 1700 block of Sherrick Road SE on the evening he died, causing the pole to break and fall onto the street.

Canton Police Department Traffic Bureau officers Beau Schoenegge and Camden Burch were the first law enforcement personnel to arrive on scene.

Based on witness reports of where the driver was going, Schoenegge and Burch went to the nearby AMVETS Patrol Station 124 at 1822 Sherrick Road SE and found him there.

When officers entered the building around 8:27 p.m., a woman standing at the entrance told police, “Please get him out of here.”

Body camera video shows officers pinning Tyson to the ground as he screams that officers are trying to kill him.

An officer pressed his knee into Tyson’s upper back and neck area for about a minute, and another officer handcuffed him. “I can’t breathe,” Tyson said several times. He fell silent less than a minute after being handcuffed.

Police officers left Tyson face down on the ground for about 8 minutes until the officer who handcuffed him noticed he could not feel a pulse. The police then removed the handcuffs. He and another officer performed chest compressions for several minutes. They gave him the opioid overdose antidote naloxone.

Canton Fire Department paramedics arrived to care for Tyson. They took him to Aultman Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 9:18 p.m., about an hour after the crash.

On Friday, Schoenegge and Burch were indicted on charges of negligent homicide, a third-degree felony punishable by up to three years in prison.

Reach Nancy at 330-580-8382 or [email protected]. Formerly known as Twitter on X: @nmolnarTR.