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Seattle Gunman Found Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity in Killing of Pregnant Woman and Unborn Child

A Washington state court has found Cordell Goosby not guilty by reason of insanity in the 2023 broad-daylight shooting that killed 34-year-old pregnant Seattle restaurant owner Eina Kwon and her unborn child and wounded her husband, Sung Kwon, as they sat at a red light. Prosecutors said Goosby sprinted up to the couple’s Tesla on June 13, 2023, and emptied a stolen handgun into the vehicle before fleeing; officers later arrested him after he allegedly raised his hands and said, "I did it! I did it!" Goosby, who was barred from possessing firearms due to an Illinois criminal record, was charged with first-degree murder and first-degree attempted murder, but mental-health experts for both the prosecution and defense concluded he met Washington’s legal standard for insanity at the time of the shooting. Under King County’s explanation of the ruling, an insanity verdict means he admits committing the acts but will be committed to a state psychiatric hospital, with any future release requiring sign-off from multiple state and court authorities. The case, which shocked Seattle’s downtown business community and fueled anger over violent crime and untreated mental illness, is already drawing renewed debate online about whether insanity commitments adequately protect the public and how often prosecutors agree to such findings in deadly attacks.

Courts and Criminal Justice Violent Crime and Mental Illness

📌 Key Facts

  • Defendant: Cordell Goosby was found not guilty by reason of insanity in King County for the June 13, 2023 shooting.
  • Victims: 34-year-old pregnant restaurant owner Eina Kwon and her unborn child were killed and her husband, Sung Kwon, was wounded while stopped at a red light in downtown Seattle.
  • Legal outcome: Experts for both prosecution and defense agreed Goosby was legally insane; under the insanity ruling he is committed to a state psychiatric hospital, with any future release subject to multiple state and court approvals.

📊 Relevant Data

In 2023, Black individuals accounted for 6,405 known murder offenders (about 41% of known), while making up 13.6% of the US population, compared to White individuals with 8,842 (56%) and 58.9% population share, resulting in a per capita homicide offending rate approximately 3 times higher for Black individuals (142 per million vs. 45 per million).

Number of murder offenders in the United States in 2023, by race — Statista

In 2019, 91% of Black homicide victims were killed by Black offenders and 81% of White victims by White offenders, with Black-on-White homicides (566 cases) more than twice as common as White-on-Black (246 cases).

Race and crime in the United States — Wikipedia (citing FBI Uniform Crime Report 2019)

For Asian American homicide victims, approximately 34% are killed by offenders of the same race/ethnicity, compared to 82% for African American victims and 67% for White victims, indicating higher inter-racial victimization rates for Asians.

Examining the Dynamics of Asian American and American Indian Homicide Victimization, 2003–2020 — Journal of Interpersonal Violence (Sage Journals)

The insanity defense is used in less than 1% of criminal cases and is successful in about 26% of those attempts, resulting in roughly 30 successful cases annually nationwide.

Mental Illness & the Insanity Defense Statistics [2026 Updated] — Criminal Defense FLA

From 2008-2012, among adults with any mental illness, 30% of Black adults received mental health services compared to 46.3% of White adults and 18.1% of Asian adults.

Mental Health Inequities: Racism and Racial Discrimination — NAMI

📰 Source Timeline (1)

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