Breonna Taylor, Louisville EMT, killed in botched police raid


Attorneys claim LMPD officers killed 26-year-old EMT in 'botched' police raid

1589305578058.png

But an attorney for Kenneth Walker claims police conducted an improper raid, which led to officers shooting an innocent woman eight times, killing her. The woman, 26-year-old Breonna Taylor, was a certified EMT working at two local hospitals.

Defense attorney Rob Eggert said police burst in Taylor's home without announcing their presence and fired at least 22 times, with bullets going into neighboring apartments, and “it was incredible that Mrs. Taylor was the only one killed.”

“Had Breonna Taylor been killed by anyone except police, the person or persons responsible for her death would have been charged with a homicide,” Eggert said in a court document, also alleging Walker is a “victim of police misconduct.”

Taylor’s family says neither Walker nor Taylor was involved in drugs and believe police were looking for someone else.

“These are two good kids,” said Bianca Austin, Taylor’s aunt. “This is incompetent police work. My niece lost her life over this.”

Austin said LMPD has not given the family any answers as to what happened.

An attorney representing the family, Sam Aguiar, said police were actually looking for someone else and other officers had picked the suspect up at his home in a separate raid shortly before the shooting.




Breonna Taylor: Louisville EMT Killed in Botched Police Raid, Lawyer Says

Breonna Taylor was a 26-year-old emergency medical technician (EMT) who was shot and killed by Louisville Metro Police on March 13 during a late-night raid on her home where her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, was also sleeping.

Walker, who was arrested and charged with attempted homicide on accusations he shot one of the police officers during the raid, is being defended by attorney Rob Eggert. Eggert told local news station WDBR that Walker was acting in self-defense and said Taylor’s death was the result of “police misconduct.”

Walker has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

1. Taylor, Who Also Worked for Two Hospitals, Wrote That She Loved Helping Others

On her Facebook page, Taylor described her love for helping others. “Working in health care is so rewarding! It makes me so happy when I know I’ve made a difference in someone else’s life!” she said.

2. Taylor Was Shot Shortly After She Was Awakened by the Raid

According to reports from the local WDRB TV station, officers from the Louisville Metro Police Department’s Criminal Interdiction Division used a battering ram to break down the door and rushed into the house on Springfield Drive at 1 a.m., waking Taylor and her boyfriend, Walker. Walker shot at the officers, wounding one, and the three who entered fired some 22 shots back, according to Eggert, Walker’s defense attorney; Taylor was shot eight times and died.

According to Walker’s lawyer, Walker shot back in self-defense because he said police did not announce themselves. His lawyer wrote to the court that Walker “wishes to exonerate himself. His girlfriend was killed in a hail of police bullets while naked and he himself simply acted to try to protect himself.”

3. Walker Is Accused of Attempted Murder

Walker, 27, was arrested and charged with attempted murder and assault after police say he shot Sgt. John Mattingly; Mattingly survived and underwent surgery for his injuries.

Walker pleaded not guilty, and his lawyer argued that he acted in self-defense because he didn’t know who was at the door.

“Had Mr. Walker known that police were outside he would have opened the door and ushered them in,” Eggert told the Courier Journal, adding that no drugs were found, the home belonged to Taylor and Walker wasn’t even the target of the police’s search warrant.

Sam Aguiar, a lawyer for Taylor’s family, told WDRB that it was a case of misidentification and that he believed officers were looking for someone else connected to a different raid.

4. Taylor’s Death Sparked Sadness and Outrage

Taylor’s sister, Tracy Chapman, has posted messages seeking #JusticeforBree often, and Taylor was recently featured on a Facebook page “The Misidentified 4 – Louisville.”

5. Police Say the Matter Is Being Investigated

In an email to WDRB, LMPD Chief Steve Conrad declined to discuss the “incident that resulted in Ms. Taylor’s death” due to the pending Public Integrity investigation. However, he did note that no camera footage was available for the incident, because Criminal Interdiction Division officers do not wear them.

Mattingly, Det. Myles Cosgrove and Det. Brent Hankison have all been placed on administrative leave. One of them, Cosgrove, was sued for excessive force by a man he shot in 2006 at a Speedway gas station; Cosgrove won the suit.

At a press conference held 15 hours after the shooting, Conrad said, “We are extremely fortunate that our officer John Mattingly was not more seriously injured. We have no body-worn video cameras to share with you … even without the videos, our Public Integrity Unit will conduct a complete review of this case.”https://www.facebook.com/dialog/sha...om/news/2020/05/breonna-taylor/&display=popup
 
Well, there are definitely varying narratives in this case. I am trying to figure out why I am even surprised. I shouldn't be. It just reinforces my already low opinion of much of our MSM.
 

VICE News has obtained and reviewed a lot of the evidence that was available to Attorney General Daniel Cameron in the Breonna Taylor case. It includes 45 body cameras from the aftermath of the botched raid, along with hundreds of hours of audio and video recordings of interviews with the 7 officers involved, dozens of responding officers, witnesses, and the former police chief, as well as thousands of pages of other documents: <snip>
Video should be on twitter page; if not, let me know & I'll post a link from YouTube. Thanks.
 
Boy, I am going to admit I don't know what to think in this one any longer. Actual video is better than the article I am going to post as I trust real things more than media.

Now this article says he and Breonna asked several times who was on the other side of the door when they knocked. And no one ever responded and the door flew open. First off, wasn't this a "no knock warrant" and now she was awake? I sure have read of course varying accounts of that. Second of all, they knocked on a no knock?

On the other hand, it is claimed by the prosecution they announced themselves. Again, why would they if it was a no knock warrant?

And now the bf is doing interviews?

I admit I am back to not having an opinion entirely one way or another. I feel like neither side is telling the total truth at the moment. Here is what I feel I know after all of this time, a woman is dead, her family got a whole lot of money, it made a big splash in headlines and the political arena, the news and with riots and that's about it...

 
Boy, I am going to admit I don't know what to think in this one any longer. Actual video is better than the article I am going to post as I trust real things more than media.

Now this article says he and Breonna asked several times who was on the other side of the door when they knocked. And no one ever responded and the door flew open. First off, wasn't this a "no knock warrant" and now she was awake? I sure have read of course varying accounts of that. Second of all, they knocked on a no knock?

On the other hand, it is claimed by the prosecution they announced themselves. Again, why would they if it was a no knock warrant?

And now the bf is doing interviews?

I admit I am back to not having an opinion entirely one way or another. I feel like neither side is telling the total truth at the moment. Here is what I feel I know after all of this time, a woman is dead, her family got a whole lot of money, it made a big splash in headlines and the political arena, the news and with riots and that's about it...

PDF on investigation from Louisville P.D. (many sections)
If you want to understand the evidence and facts, take the time to read every document @GarAndMo39 posted in this link. If you do, let me know afterwards of your educated opinion.
 

Joshua Jaynes: Detective’s attorney acknowledges Breonna Taylor search warrant was ‘inaccurate’​

Judge Mary Shaw signed on March 12, allowing for the raid that left Taylor dead in her apartment hours later.

 

Breonna Taylor’s boyfriend says police didn’t try to save her as she lay dying​

<snip>
Kenneth Walker, Breonna Taylor’s boyfriend, found out from the news that the woman he had hoped to marry and who had just been shot by police in a botched raid on her apartment had died.

He also revealed in an interview broadcast on Wednesday morning that law enforcement officers who searched the apartment after she had been shot in a hail of bullets did not appear to try to save Taylor as she lay on the floor.

Swat team video shows officers calling the area “a crime scene”.

“Let’s go ahead and move out. All right, she’s done,” an officer can be heard saying. <snip>
 

Officer shot in Breonna Taylor’s apartment speaks out about deadly incident​

The Louisville police officer injured in a drug raid resulted in Breonna Taylor's death inside her apartment spoke out against the “misinformation” and “false narratives” of the case in his first public interview on the incident.

Speaking with ABC News and the Louisville Courier Journal, Jonathan Mattingly said that night was about police “doing our job” and returning fire when fired upon – and had nothing to do with race. <snip>
 

Breonna Taylor: grand juror speaks out, saying homicide charges weren't offered​

Anonymous juror challenges statements made by the Kentucky attorney general after clearing way to speak publicly
<snip>
In a written statement, the grand juror, who was not identified, said that only wanton endangerment charges were offered to them to consider against one officer. The grand jury asked questions about bringing other charges against the officers, “and the grand jury was told there would be none because the prosecutors didn’t feel they could make them stick”, the grand juror said. <snip>
 

A Cop Involved In Breonna Taylor's Killing Said She'd Be Alive If Police Barged In Sooner. That’s “Outrageous,” Experts Said.​


Police experts told BuzzFeed News that Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly's response was "outrageous," "mind-boggling" and that it didn't make sense.

Picture of Tasneem Nashrulla Tasneem Nashrulla BuzzFeed News Reporter

Posted on October 21, 2020, at 4:22 p.m. ET
<snip>
"And basically what [Mattingly is] saying is that he wishes he would have done a quick-knock raid, which is illegal, unconstitutional, and a huge part of the problem with police tactical raids," Kraska said.

Kirk Burkhalter, a New York Law School professor and a former New York Police Department detective, said it was "mind-boggling" that of all the "million ways" police could have done this differently, Mattingly was still fixated on thinking the only way to do this was to "to take the door off the hinges by surprise."

Even if police had barged in to her house sooner, Burkhalter said "there is a high likelihood the same result would have occurred." <snip>
 

Mattingly hopes officer made 'mistake' in saying he gave info for Breonna Taylor warrant​

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jonathan Mattingly, the Louisville Metro Police sergeant shot during an attempted drug search that ended in Breonna Taylor's death, says a fellow detective misstated Mattingly's role in securing the search warrant that led police to her door.

Detective Joshua Jaynes is under investigation to determine whether he falsified information a Jefferson County circuit judge relied on to approve the search warrant for Taylor's apartment.

Mattingly, 47, said he can't explain why Jaynes said Mattingly had verified packages for a suspected drug dealer were being delivered to Taylor's residence — because he didn't tell Jaynes that.

"Hopefully, it was a mistake on his part," Mattingly said in a Tuesday interview with The Courier Journal/ABC News.

"I can't answer for Detective Jaynes or what his thought process was. That's something that he's going to have to deal with." <snip>
 

Wounded officer's wife recounts frantic hours after Breonna Taylor shooting​

"It's 11:11. Make a wish."

It was a weird text for her husband to send, Nicki Mattingly thought, especially since neither of them was particularly superstitious.

"I got my wish," she responded. "Thank you, love you. Be careful, I need you to come home to us." <snip>
The next thing she knew, three men were standing over her bed. One was her husband's partner.

"I need you to get dressed, and we need to get to the hospital," she remembers him saying.

She knew something had gone wrong with her husband. He had been shot. What she didn't know, at least right away, she said, was he alive? <snip>
 

911 call from Breonna Taylor shooting: 'Somebody kicked in the door and shot my girlfriend'​

(you can listen to the call here)
I don't understand, where are all of the cops? She is shot and they just leave her and him there uncuffed or anything else and let him call 911 rather than the cops doing anything? Or did they all dive out of the residence when shooting began? It is quiet other than him... Odd. I guess I need to look back to refresh my recollection.
 
I don't understand, where are all of the cops? She is shot and they just leave her and him there uncuffed or anything else and let him call 911 rather than the cops doing anything? Or did they all dive out of the residence when shooting began? It is quiet other than him... Odd. I guess I need to look back to refresh my recollection.
They were waiting for SWAT.
 

Louisville Metro Council limits use of force by police​

<snip>
The ordinance codifies eight best practices for when officers use force, requiring Chief Yvette Gentry to change two of LMPD's Standard Operating Procedures.

One change would require officers to report any time they point a gun at someone. The other would prohibit officers from shooting at moving vehicles unless someone is firing from it or using it to cause injury or damage. <snip>
They were waiting for SWAT.
Yes, @kdg411 , that's my understanding, too (as best as I can recall).
 

Forum statistics

Threads
3,009
Messages
240,996
Members
969
Latest member
SamiraMill
Back
Top Bottom