"How many more lives are gonna be lost to this type of reckless activity? How many more young Black lives will be lost?," Rex Elliott, an attorney for Lewis' family, said Thursday at a news conference.
"There are good people in Columbus who know the problem is severe but their knowledge of it does not seem to be listening to the issue at all and that's very worrisome," said Wil Haygood, a journalist and biographer chronicling the lives of Black Americans and who has wrote multiple books about life in Columbus.
Haygood, a visiting scholar at the Miami University in Ohio who grew up in Columbus, said the lives of Black people in the city have been marked by interactions with law enforcement for generations. Haygood recalls White enforcement officers confronting demonstrators during racial protests in 1968 and other times when he was stopped by police for no clear reason.
"I grew up not wanting to be around police officers thinking that they were out to do you harm," he said.
In 2018, police statistics show, almost 55% of CDP's use-of-force incidents targeted Black people, who make up less than 29% of the city's population.
Sean Walton, an attorney representing the families of several Black men killed by police in the city, started his career as a personal injury attorney but expanded his practice to civil rights litigation more than five years ago after meeting a family who was protesting the death of relative outside the county courthouse.
He filed his first lawsuit in 2016 and within a year he took the cases of three other Black men who were killed by police at the time. As the years passed, Walton says he's seen how body cameras and cell phone videos have proven "what the people living in Columbus have long known."
"It is not that the recent spate of shootings is a new development," he said.
The national attention in the aftermath of the police shootings and deaths "has enlightened the country as to the persistent police threat that Black and brown people feel in our daily lives as Columbus citizens," Walton said.
In the past days, several groups in the city have described Lewis' death as evidence of the "significant, ongoing harm perpetuated against Black people" at the hands of law enforcement and began organizing forums, prayers and protests to be held Friday and over the weekend