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Inset left: Jonathan Morris (Hamilton County Sheriff”s Office). Inset right: Ryan Johnson (Cincinnati Police Department). Background: The Taco Bell parking lot where Morris allegedly shot Johnson to death in Cincinnati on Aug. 29, 2025 (Google Maps).
An Ohio man’s quest for revenge has landed him in jail, following his dismissal from a job earlier this summer. The Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office has charged 21-year-old Jonathan Morris with murder.
The incident unfolded in the parking lot of a Taco Bell located on Gest Road in Cincinnati’s Queensgate neighborhood on August 29, authorities report.
According to prosecutors, Morris allegedly shot and killed 32-year-old Ryan Johnson just after midnight. This tragic event occurred merely a day after Morris was terminated from his position at the same establishment.
“The family is devastated,” stated prosecutor David Hickenlooper during a hearing before Hamilton County Municipal Court Judge Tyrone Yates, as reported by Cincinnati’s Fox affiliate WXIX. “It was a senseless act. We believe the victim was only trying to help.”
Hickenlooper’s remarks highlighted the belief that Johnson was attempting to assist Morris before the tragic shooting, the television station reported.
The prosecutor’s comments were in reference to the victim seemingly attempting to help the defendant, the TV station reported.
Instead, however, Morris killed Johnson outside the popular fast food establishment where both men worked, according to law enforcement. Police officers who arrived to reports of shots fired that night said they discovered Johnson suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. He was eventually pronounced dead at the scene.
At the time of the incident, Johnson was not in his Taco Bell uniform, police told WXIX. Rather, he was wearing jeans and a T-shirt. No shell casings were found at the scene of the crime, police said. Investigators did, however, obtain a description of the suspect and the presumed motive for the killing from a witness or witnesses at the crime scene, authorities say.
During Thursday’s hearing, the court quickly assessed the evidence against the defendant and set bond at $500,000, records show.
The state, for its part, requested $2 million bond, WXIX reported.
The victim’s family had other ideas.
“He killed my grandson,” Johnson’s grandmother said at one point during the hearing – reportedly standing up to address the judge directly. “He doesn’t need to be out. He took a life.”
Morris is represented by a public defender in the case. On Thursday, the defense attorney said his client had only one prior contact with the criminal justice system — an allegation of which he was acquitted. Hamilton County court records show Morris was accused of aggravated robbery in September 2023 but acquitted in March 2024.
The defense attorney also said neither his client nor any member of his family has the money to pay for bond — and that Morris is the primary caregiver for his 1-year-old son. Morris and his son live with the defendant’s father, the defense attorney went on.
A police officer, however, said law enforcement searched the defendant’s father’s residence and never found him there – noting that it took investigators weeks to finally apprehend Morris.
Ultimately, the court split the difference.
Morris will have to pay the full $500,000 to make bond; typically defendants pay 10 percent of the amount to satisfy bond conditions. In the event that amount is paid, the defendant will be subject to 24/7 electronic monitoring and house arrest, the judge ruled.