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Inset: Gage Smith (Franklin County Jail). Background: The area in Ohio where Smith killed his girlfriend in January 2025 (Google Maps).
In a tragic case out of Ohio, a man who confessed to authorities about his involvement in his girlfriend’s death will serve just under five years behind bars. Gage Smith, aged 30, will spend six years in a state prison following his role in the fatal shooting of 32-year-old Autumn Ward, a life cut short within their shared apartment.
This week, a judge in Franklin County sentenced Smith after he admitted to charges of reckless homicide involving a firearm, alongside possession of drugs. Originally facing a murder charge, Smith’s plea led to the reduced count. The incident, which took place in 2025, has been closely followed due to its grim nature and the subsequent legal proceedings.
Details from an official report reveal that police officers from the Columbus Division responded to a disturbance call on January 7, 2025, at around 7:21 a.m. The location was the 100 block of Chittenden Avenue, where they found Smith in a state of emotional turmoil.
Inside the apartment, officers discovered Ward with a gunshot wound, unresponsive, and emergency medical services declared her deceased at 7:49 a.m. The investigation quickly pointed to domestic violence as a significant factor in the case.
Court records indicate that Smith himself dialed 911, admitting to the responders that he was responsible for Ward’s death. This confession played a pivotal role in the legal proceedings that followed.
The sentencing was delivered by Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Carl Aveni, who ruled for a six-year prison sentence, which falls short of the maximum seven years suggested by the plea deal. Factoring in time already served, Smith’s actual time behind bars will be reduced to less than five years.
The victim’s mother, Karen Ward, sharply criticized the outcome as “not fair” and said that Smith’s punishment was a far cry from justice, according to a report from Columbus, Ohio, ABC affiliate WSYX.
“I thought I was told when this happened, he might get 20 years. I thought that’s not enough. I do not believe in the court system,” she told the station, reiterating that she did not believe the shooting was accidental. “He killed Autumn, let her lay there dead for hours and didn’t call for help. He just wanted to get high.”
During the sentencing hearing, prosecutors reportedly said the evidence did not support proving that Smith acted with the intent to kill.
“Ultimately, no matter what the sentence is today, Mr. Smith is going to be released as a still relatively young man, and Ms. Ward’s promising life was cut short, and it’s because of Mr. Smith’s reckless handling of a firearm,” Assistant Prosecutor Daniel Lenert said in court.
Lenert said Smith had used ketamine the night before the shooting and kept a loaded firearm under a pillow.
Smith’s defense attorney, Paul Olah, acknowledged his client’s behavior but argued his client did not intend to kill Ward.
“I don’t think he would stand here and tell everyone in this room that he was a perfect boyfriend. He knows he wasn’t,” Olah said. “He knows he wasn’t, but I think he also would say he’s not a murderer.”
Smith addressed the court and apologized to Ward’s family.
“I love and care for this remarkable woman, and not a day goes by that I don’t miss her,” he said. “I never meant for any of this to happen and wish that with all my heart that it hadn’t.”
He added that he could not expect forgiveness and would “continue to remain accountable for my recklessness, my stupidity, and my complacency.”