YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio- One of the men arrested following a brawl at Youngstown's city hall earlier this week appeared in court Friday morning.

Wade Shaw, 35, pleaded not guilty to three charges stemming from the fight between family members of the victims and suspect at an arraignment hearing for his nephew, murder suspect Melvin Shaw.

Shaw was tasered in the aftermath of the fight, which required dozens of police officers to break up.

Melvin Shaw, 18, was arraigned Wednesday on charges of murder and attempted murder in the shootings of Tracee Banks, 17, and Ohio State football recruit Jamel Turner at a house on Manchester Avenue on June 19.

Following the hearing, members of Banks' and Shaw's family became entangled in the fight outside the courtroom.

Shaw, along with Ovidio Santiago, 40, were arrested in connection with the skirmish.

Barbara Cottle, Banks' grandmother, said she believes there should have been more security in the building to prevent incidents like this from occurring.

"The police should have had security out there when both families were leaving. What happened? They know it's a murder case," Cottle said.

Judge Elizabeth Kobly said the brawl serves as an example for why judges believe more security is needed at the courthouse.

"When we have situations like this where there is a homicide and you have the victim's family and you have the defendant's family. There is no way to separate the two. We have security guards that aren't properly trained to deal with security concerns like this and we're an accident waiting to happen," Kobly said.

She said the facilities are not adequate to maintain the safety of all of the parties involved in courtroom proceedings.

"We need to have the ability to separate defendants from witnesses from victimsfrom family members. And right now we have a hallway. We have a limited hallway where we can't separate anybody from anybody," Kobly said.

Mayor Jay Williams said Kobly was using the incident to solidify her position in an ongoing lawsuit over security.

"This issue has to deal with the tragic event that happened. The feelings and the emotions of those involved and again, I just think it's highly inappropriate for a judge to try to use this as a mechanism to further their basis of a lawsuit," Williams said.

Security measures that are in place at the courthouse include metal detectors and manned security guards.

"Unfortunately, we've seen this happen in the most secure of federal courts. We've seen this happen in state courts. This has happened in local courts across the country. That doesn't excuse it. But for the judge to say that this is attributable to the configuration of the courtroom is misguided," Williams said.

Authorities are reviewing the surveillance video and expect others to be charged.

NOTE:  Due to excessive profanity, the video provided on this page does not contain any audio.