New details are emerging in the fatal shooting of Casey Goodson Jr., a 23-year-old Black man who was killed by a Franklin County Sheriff’s deputy in Columbus, Ohio.

Deputy Jason Meade is named as the officer who fatally shot Goodson on that fateful day.

Goodson was apparently inside his home holding a sandwich when he was fatally shot in front of his mother and two toddlers, according to a report by the Associated Press. Police maintained Goodson was outside of his home and warranted excessive force because they mistook the sandwich for a gun.

The details follow the announcement that Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost declined to take up the case citing that Columbus police took three days to bring the case to their attention. Columbus police also waited two days before they released Goodson’s name as the victim.

“We received a referral to take a three-day-old officer-involved shooting case,” a spokesperson for Yost said in a statement Monday night. “Not knowing all the reasons as to why so much time has passed before the case was referred to BCI, we cannot accept this case.”

Yost, a Republican, refused in light of an order signed by Columbus Mayor which enabled the state attorney general’s office to investigate all deaths involving the Columbus Police Department.

Instead U.S. Attorney David M. DeVillers in Ohio, with the aid of the Justice Department and the Bureau of Criminal Investigation will take up the case.

On Tuesday Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther shared his gratefulness that the U.S. Department of Justice and FBI plan to join the investigation after the local community demanded transparency in a fast evolving investigation that has raised suspicion and concerns.

Goodson’s family is also fighting for answers, after lawyers for his family revealed he was not the target of the US Marshal’s Southern Ohio Fugitive Task Force, who was working with Meade on a separate investigation.

“While police claim that Casey drove by, waving a gun, and was confronted by the deputy after exiting his vehicle, that narrative leaves out key details that raise cause for extreme concern,” according to a press release by Walton + Brown, LLP, the law firm representing his family along with Friedman & Gilbert.

Police maintain they recovered a gun at the scene, but his family claims it was a sandwich he had just purchased from Subway. His family confirmed that he did have a license to carry a concealed weapon and are asking any witnesses to come forward who may be able to help their case.

“We demand a thorough and transparent investigation into Casey’s tragic death. Police who use deadly force outside the bounds of the law endanger our communities and must be held accountable” said attorney Sarah Gelsomino, a partner at Friedman & Gilbert.”