On April 5, 2012, Boyd’s family filed a lawsuit against Chicago. The lawsuit was settled in March 2013. In November 2013, Servin was charged with involuntary manslaughter, he requested a bench trial. This was the first time in 17 years that criminal charges were filed against an off-duty cop in Cook County, IL. Porter's reasoning was that since the shooting was intentional, Servin could not be charged with recklessness. "It is intentional and the crime, if any there be, is first-degree murder," said Porter in his ruling. Following this ruling, Servin could not be charged with murder due to
double jeopardy protections. Servin claimed he fired because someone in the group was holding a gun, but it was actually only a cellphone. Following the April ruling, Chicago-based organizers met and planned a number of actions through the Spring and Summer of 2015 to ensure "that Rekia would not be forgotten and that her family would not be abandoned."
Black Youth Project 100 (BYP100) organized a rally at a Chicago Police Board meeting in August 2015, effectively shutting the meeting down early in response to cavalier treatment of Boyd's bereaved brother, Martinez Sutton. In November 2015, Chicago Mayor
Rahm Emanuel and police superintendent
Garry McCarthy both suggested that Dante Servin should be fired by the Chicago Police Board. The city paid $4.5 million to Boyd's family to
settle a wrongful-death lawsuit. Servin resigned on May 17, 2016, two days before the departmental hearing which was to decide whether he should be fired. In November 2019, Servin requested that the case be expunged from his record. The request was denied by a judge, as was a subsequent request to seal the case's records. ==Protests==