Springfield, IL (CAPITOL CITY NOW) – Springfield NAACP president Austin Randolph is calling for calm, ahead of the scheduled release Monday of the police body cam video of the shooting death of Sonya Massey July 6. Sean Grayson, the Sangamon County deputy who fired the fatal shot, has been fired, charged, and jailed pending trial.

“We don’t need any destruction; we don’t need any distractions. We want this court case to go all the way, and we don’t need any interference from anybody,” Randolph said Friday. “There’s enough crime hatred and stupidity out there as it is. We don’t need any more.”

The video is scheduled to be released at 2 p.m.

The Massey case is an outlier, says University of Illinois Springfield criminology and criminal justice professor Ryan Williams.

“When officers do end up killing a citizen, only about one percent of those killings ever lead to some sort of arrest. Arrest!” said Williams. “And then, of those, only about half lead to a conviction.”

And think of all the officers who go their entire careers without even firing their gun. Grayson was fired, charged, and jailed pending trial within two weeks of the July 6 incident in which he fatally shot Massey, who called police from her Springfield home to report a possible break-in. Prosecutors say Grayson bypassed all non-lethal options in fatally shooting Massey after telling her to put down a pot of hot water.