![](https://i0.wp.com/www.capitolhillseattle.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/img_8557-1.jpg?resize=400%2C548&ssl=1)
A jury has found Patrick Cooney guilty of second degree murder and assault in the deadly shooting of Elijah Lewis on Capitol Hill.
Prosecutors said security video from Seattle Central and the Walgreens at the corner of Broadway and Pine showed Cooney opening fire on the car driven by Lewis as he picked up his young nephew even as it was turning to leave onto Broadway.
Police say Cooney was riding a rental electric scooter on E Pine just after 5 PM on April 1, 2023 when he became embroiled in the altercation and opened fire into the vehicle Lewis was driving, striking him with a fatal shot and hitting the child in the calf. The child was treated for his injuries and released from the hospital. Lewis was shot and died at Harborview later that night.
CHS reported here on court battles over evidence in the case including the 37-year-old Cooney’s previous incidents involving firearms with Capitol Hill drivers.
The jury’s decision brings the justice process nearer a close. Cooney is slated to be sentenced in March.
Lewis, 23 years old at the time of the killing, is remembered as a dedicated community builder and entrepreneur in the Central District and Africatown communities. He was proud of his efforts as a self-described “serial entrepreneur” in addition to his work with Sankofa Theater and doing outreach for the Africatown Community Land Trust and events like this Black Wall Street festival. A USA Today columnist wrote that Lewis “could have been the next MLK.”
“Today, a King County jury returned a guilty verdict for Mr. Cooney’s role in the tragic murder of Elijah Lewis and shooting his young nephew,” said King County Prosecuting Attorney Leesa Manion. “I am grateful to the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office team for their work on this case. My sympathies continue to be with Mr. Lewis’s family and those who loved him.”
The prosecutor’s office said the total statewide standard sentencing range for second-degree murder and first-degree assault convictions, each with firearm enhancements is 336 to 463 months.
The sentencing date is scheduled for March 14 in the King County Courthouse, though there’s a possibility that could be continued by the court, the prosecutor’s office said.