Keianna Miller’s story has received a lot of attention lately, both because of the terrible loss she suffered and because of the wider ramifications her lawsuit has for how police brutality is handled in small-town America. Her life was devastated in an unthinkably cruel way when police in Macomb, Illinois, killed her 4-year-old son Terrell while responding to a domestic disturbance call. Instead of remaining silent, legal action was taken. The institutional framework that permitted such an incident to be considered “justifiable” is now being challenged in her civil rights complaint.

Even while discussions about police accountability have grown over the last ten years, incidents like this one still happen. In this instance, Lt. Nick Goc, the officer who fired the fatal shot, had only a few seconds to evaluate a highly tense scenario. However, Miller lost everything because of those seconds. According to her lawsuit, excessive force was employed, and no child should have been harmed in what started out as a domestic violence report, especially not her adorable, Spider-Man-loving son.
Full Name | Keianna Miller |
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Age | 38 (as of 2025) |
Hometown | Macomb, Illinois |
Occupation | Former factory worker |
Child | Terrell Miller (deceased, age 4) |
Lawsuit Type | Civil rights lawsuit alleging excessive police force |
Incident Date | March 16, 2024 |
Officer Involved | Lt. Nick Goc, Macomb Police Department |
Legal Status of Officer | Cleared of wrongdoing by internal investigation |
Additional Charges (2025) | Charged with aggravated battery and domestic battery |
Reference Link |
Miller had come back to Macomb in October 2018 in search of a new beginning. Finding out she was pregnant was not only unexpected, but also emotionally reassuring as she had previously been advised that conception was unlikely. In honor of her brother, whose passing in 2012 had a profound impact on her, she called her son Terrell. However, the scrutiny that followed Miller never subsided, even in a 15,000-person town with one of the biggest law enforcement education programs in the nation.
By 2020, social unfairness had exacerbated her trauma. She publicly discussed having recurrent nightmares in which she and her child were slain during a police raid, and she took Terrell to a protest when George Floyd was killed by the police. Unfortunately, in 2024, that fantasy came true. It was surrounded by tumultuous, agonizing, and incredibly complicated circumstances.
Miller claims that Anthony George, her lover, had been hostile and envious of her late-night factory shifts for a long time. He had already been imprisoned for a month for assaulting her. George was irate, inebriated, and violent when Miller and Terrell returned home on March 16, 2024, following a tearful family visit to commemorate her brother’s death anniversary. She says he repeatedly stabbed her and raped her at knifepoint. Her shouts startled several neighbors, who dialed 911.
The police showed up quickly. Officer Korri Cameron and Goc kicked down the door of the flat. According police bodycam footage, Miller, covered in blood, refused to leave without her son, while Goc allegedly yelled at George and demanded to see his hands. With one knife at Terrell’s throat and another to his stomach, George reappeared with the boy in his arms. Goc killed George and Terrell instantaneously with a single shot he fired just 19 seconds after arriving.
Miller waited for assistance outside, bleeding from 25 stab wounds, not realizing her son had passed away. Other cops, union representatives, and even Miller’s mother and sister showed up at the site in the interim. In video that was eventually made public, Goc was seen saying to himself, “I killed a baby,” while another officer comforted him, “You’re okay, you’re okay… we’re going to take care of this.”
Across jurisdictions, the term “justified use of force” has proven particularly problematic. It frequently serves as a shield rather than a solution, defending any course of action that the engaged officer deems “reasonable.” But when a child’s life is on the line, what does reasonable mean? This issue is brought to the public’s attention by Miller’s lawsuit, which demands both ethical and legal examination.
Her case is statistically not unique. Since 2015, police have killed around 200 youngsters in the United States, according to a Washington Post database. Terrell and other Black youngsters are six times more likely to become victims. These differences imply that many of these avoidable deaths are caused by fundamental systems rather than by specific bad actors.
Since then, Miller’s path has not been straightforward. After an alleged stabbing in June 2025, she was arrested once more and charged with domestic abuse and aggravated battery. One man said she used a steak knife to strike him. Pretrial parole was rejected by Judge Heidi Benson, who stated that she posed a risk to the community and the claimed victim. According to court records, Miller might have also been released at the time from an Indiana battery case.
These accusations could undermine her lawsuit suit’s legitimacy in the eyes of detractors. However, for activists, it draws attention to a more general fact: trauma doesn’t just go away. It condenses. It happens again. Furthermore, these loops can be extremely challenging to break in areas with a lack of mental health resources and systemic poverty. The court system frequently acts as both the oppressor and the arbiter for victims of both domestic abuse and police assault.
Although Miller’s case is still pending, it is part of a growing number of cases that seek to make police departments responsible for their threat assessments, particularly when it comes to children, in addition to seeking compensation. Her unvarnished voice contributes to a growing movement that rejects collateral damage as a result of law enforcement.
Amazingly, she hasn’t lost her resolve. Miller keeps fighting for justice, not only for Terrell but also for other parents who are too scared or worn out to speak up, even though he has experienced personal pain and is facing criminal accusations. Her court battle serves as a mirror, showing how societal flaws, such as unbridled police power and untreated domestic abuse, can intersect with disastrous results.