Anger in the streets as police officers cleared over Breonna Taylor's death

Two police officers involved in the shooting of Breonna Taylor will not face criminal charges for her death, but a third officer will be charged with first degree wanton endangerment of her neighbours.

A woman speaks during a protest in Louisville, on 23 September.

A woman speaks during a protest in Louisville, on 23 September. Source: AP

Two white police officers who fired into the apartment of Breonna Taylor, a black medical worker, will face no charges for her death because their use of force was justified, but a third will be charged with the wanton endangerment of her neighbours, the state attorney general said on Wednesday.

Attorney General Daniel Cameron announced the Louisville grand jury's decision at a news conference as protesters against racial injustice and police brutality massed on city streets.

Some later clashed with police in riot gear. About a dozen people were arrested in one confrontation between hundreds of demonstrators and a group of heavily armed law enforcement officers just outside downtown Louisville ahead of a curfew at 9pm.
Police detain protesters in Louisville on 23 September.
Police detain protesters in Louisville on 23 September. Source: AP
Crowds of varying sizes were also gathering in New York, Washington, DC, Atlanta, and Chicago.

Former Detective Brett Hankison's indictment for wanton endangerment in the first degree represents the lowest level of felony crime in Kentucky and carries a maximum sentence of up to five years in prison.

Benjamin Crump, a civil rights lawyer representing the Taylor family, said it was "outrageous" that none of the officers would be criminally charged for Ms Taylor's death.
Ms Taylor, 26, was killed in front of her armed boyfriend shortly after midnight on 13 March at her Louisville apartment after Mr Hankison and his two colleagues forced their way in with a so-called "no knock" warrant.

The two other officers, Sergeant Jonathan Mattingly and Detective Myles Cosgrove, were not charged because they were justified under Kentucky law in returning fire after Ms Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, shot at them, wounding Mr Mattingly in the thigh, Mr Cameron said.

"There is no doubt that this is a gut-wrenching, emotional case," Mr Cameron, a black Republican, said at a news conference.

Mr Hankison fired his weapon 10 times. Some of the bullets travelled through Ms Taylor's apartment into an adjacent apartment where a man, a pregnant woman and a child were at home.

There was "no conclusive" evidence that any of Mr Hankison's bullets hit Ms Taylor, Mr Cameron said.
Louisville’s Police Force Feels Besieged on Two Fronts
(The New York Times) Source: The New York Times

Anger in the street

Governor Andy Beshear called on Mr Cameron to release all evidence from the investigation to benefit the public’s understanding of the case. “Those feeling frustration, hurt - they deserve to know more,” he said.

Protesters immediately took to the streets to express their frustration with the outcome. Hundreds marched while shouting, “No lives matter until Black lives matter.” The demonstrations were mostly peaceful.

In the Highlands neighbourhood at the edge of downtown, a number of protesters threw water bottles at police, who responded by firing pepper balls into the crowd. Scuffles ensued, and some windows of area businesses were broken.
Protesters speak, Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2020, in Louisville, Ky. A grand jury has indicted one officer on criminal charges six months after Breonna Taylor was fatally shot by police in Kentucky.
Protesters speak in Louisville on 23 September. Source: AP
Addressing a late-afternoon news conference, Mayor Greg Fischer said the US Justice Department was still investigating whether federal laws were broken in connection with Ms Taylor’s death, including possible civil rights violations, while a broader police inquiry remained under way.

“It’s clear that there are policies and procedures that needed to be changed, because Breonna Taylor should still be alive,” he said.

“Let’s turn to each other, not on each other, at this moment of opportunity.”

Speaking from a campaign event in North Carolina, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said his “heart goes out” to Ms Taylor’s mother, adding in an appeal to protesters: “Do not sully her memory, or her mother’s, by engaging in violence.”
Louisville police officers Myles Cosgrove, Brett Hankison and Jonathan Mattingly. Hankison was fired by Louisville's police chief for his role in the shooting.
Louisville police officers Myles Cosgrove, Brett Hankison and Jonathan Mattingly. Hankison was fired by Louisville's police chief for his role in the shooting. Source: Louisville Metropolitan Police
The three officers involved in the raid knocked on Ms Taylor's apartment door and announced their presence outside, which was corroborated by a neighbour who witnessed the arrival, Mr Cameron said. Getting no answer, they "breached the door," he said.

Mr Mattingly entered first, and at the end of a corridor saw Ms Taylor and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, with Mr Walker pointing a gun.

Mr Walker fired, injuring Mr Mattingly in the thigh. Mr Mattingly returned fire, and his colleagues began shooting soon after, Mr Cameron said. Mr Hankison fired 10 bullets, Mr Cameron said.
Six bullets hit Ms Taylor, Mr Cameron said, contradicting reports she had been hit five times. Ballistics investigators found only one shot, fired by Mr Cosgrove, was deadly, Mr Cameron said.

In June, the Louisville Metro Police Department fired Mr Hankison with Interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder writing that Mr Hankison "displayed an extreme indifference to the value of human life" when he "wantonly and blindly fired" into Ms Taylor's home.

The department reassigned Mr Mattingly and Mr Cosgrove to administrative duties.

Louisville police obtained the warrant to enter Ms Taylor's apartment from a judge as part of an investigation into a drug ring at another house elsewhere in Louisville. They told the judge that they believed that one of the men suspected of selling drugs had used Taylor's apartment to receive packages.
Breonna Taylor was shot dead in Louisville on 13 March after three policemen burst into her apartment.
Former Louisville Officer Is Indicted in Breonna Taylor Case. Two other officers have been cleared. Source: The New York Times
Ms Taylor had previously dated a suspected drug seller but had severed ties with him, according to her family.
She and Mr Walker, were in bed when police broke down her door with a battering ram shortly after midnight, the families' representatives have said.

Mr Walker has been charged with attempted murder. His lawyer has said there is evidence the bullet in Mr Mattingly's thigh was shot by one of his colleagues, not by Mr Walker, but Mr Cameron disputed this on Wednesday.

Images of Ms Taylor have become a familiar sight at ongoing protests against police violence in cities across the United States. Last month, television mogul Oprah Winfrey featured an image of Taylor on the cover of O, the Oprah Magazine.

Louisville has agreed to pay $16.9 million to Ms Taylor's family to settle a wrongful-death lawsuit, Mayor Fischer announced earlier this month.


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6 min read
Published 24 September 2020 7:21am
Updated 24 September 2020 11:28am


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