Two police officers shot amid Louisville protests over Breonna Taylor ruling

Two police officers shot amid Louisville protests over Breonna Taylor ruling

by Joseph Anthony
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A protester is detained after clashing with police after a grand jury considering the March killing of Breonna Taylor, a Black medical worker, in her home in Louisville, Kentucky, voted to indict one of three white police officers for wanton endangerment, in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. September 23, 2020. REUTERS/Bryan Woolston

Two police officers were shot and wounded late on Wednesday in Louisville, Kentucky, during protests of a grand jury ruling decried by civil rights activists as a miscarriage of justice in the fatal police shooting of Breonna Taylor in March.

The grand jury decided that none of the three white officers involved in the fatal police raid on Taylorโ€™s apartment would be charged directly for her death, though one officer was indicted on charges of endangering her neighbors.
The indictment came more than six months after Taylor, 26, a Black emergency medical technician and aspiring nurse, was killed in front of her armed boyfriend after the three officers forced their way into her home with a search warrant in a drug trafficking investigation.
Her death became a symbol, and her image a familiar sight, during months of daily protests against racial injustice and police brutality in cities across the United States. Last month media mogul Oprah Winfrey featured Taylor on the cover of her magazine calling for the prosecution of officers involved in her slaying.
Following the grand jury announcement, protesters immediately took to the streets of Kentuckyโ€™s largest city and marched for hours chanting, โ€œNo lives matter until Black lives matter,โ€ amid sporadic clashes with police in riot gear.
The demonstrations remained mostly peaceful until several gunshots rang out as heavily armed police closed in on a throng of protesters at nightfall, ordering the crowd to disperse about a half hour before a 9 p.m. curfew was due to go into effect.
A Reuters journalist on the scene heard gunfire erupt from the crowd moments after police had fired chemical irritants and โ€œflash-bangโ€ rounds.
Two officers were shot and wounded, interim Louisville Metropolitan Police chief Robert Schroeder told reporters.
One suspect was arrested, and the two wounded officers were in stable condition โ€“ one undergoing surgery โ€“ with non-life-threatening injuries, Schroeder said. He gave no further details.
Earlier in the day about a dozen people were arrested in a skirmish between hundreds of demonstrators and a group of law enforcement officers in the Highlands neighborhood just outside downtown Louisville. Some windows of nearby businesses were also broken. The crowds largely dissipated after Wednesday nightโ€™s shooting.
Sympathy protests of varying sizes also were held in several other cities on Wednesday, including New York, Washington, Atlanta, and Chicago.
โ€˜GUT-WRENCHINGโ€™ CASE
Announcing the grand juryโ€™s conclusions hours earlier, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron said the panel had declined to bring any charges whatsoever against two of the three white policemen who fired into Taylorโ€™s apartment on March 13.
The two officers, Sergeant Jonathan Mattingly and Detective Myles Cosgrove, were found to have been justified under Kentucky law in returning fire after Taylorโ€™s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, shot at them, wounding Mattingly in the thigh, Cameron said.
Walker has contended he opened fire in self defense, believing intruders were breaking into Taylorโ€™s home and that they did not hear police announce their arrival.
The third officer, former Detective Brett Hankison, was indicted on three counts of wanton endangerment in the first degree, an offense that ranks at the lowest level of felony crimes in Kentucky and carries a maximum sentence of up to five years in prison.
Cameron said those three counts stem from the fact that some of the rounds Hankison fired โ€“ 10 in all โ€“ traveled through Taylorโ€™s apartment into an adjacent unit where a man, a pregnant woman and a child were at home.
Cameron, however, said there was โ€œno conclusiveโ€ evidence that any of Hankisonโ€™s bullets struck Taylor.
Six bullets struck Taylor, he said, and ballistics investigators found only one shot, fired by Cosgrove, was fatal, Cameron said.
โ€œThere is no doubt that this is a gut-wrenching, emotional case,โ€ Cameron, a Black Republican, said at a news conference.
Benjamin Crump, a prominent civil rights lawyer representing the Taylor family, denounced the outcome of the grand jury probe, saying it was โ€œoutrageousโ€ that none of the three officers involved in the raid was criminally charged with causing Taylorโ€™s death.
Governor Andy Beshear called on Cameron to release all evidence from the investigation to benefit the publicโ€™s understanding of the case. โ€œThose feeling frustration, hurt โ€“ they deserve to know more,โ€ he said.
Addressing a late-afternoon news conference, Mayor Greg Fischer said the U.S. Justice Department was still investigating whether federal laws were broken in connection with Taylorโ€™s death, including possible civil rights violations, while a broader police inquiry remained under way.
โ€œItโ€™s clear that there are policies and procedures that needed to be changed, because Breonna Taylor should still be alive,โ€ he said. โ€œLetโ€™s turn to each other, not on each other, at this moment of opportunity.โ€
The police chief fired Hankison in June, concluding he had โ€œdisplayed an extreme indifference to the value of human lifeโ€ when he โ€œwantonly and blindly firedโ€ into Taylorโ€™s home. Mattingly and Cosgrove were reassigned to administrative duties.
Louisville has agreed to pay $12 million to Taylorโ€™s family to settle a wrongful-death lawsuit, Mayor Fischer announced earlier this month. He said the settlement was intended to โ€œbegin the healing process.โ€
President Donald Trump said on Twitter that he was praying for the two officers shot on Wednesday and had spoken to Kentuckyโ€™s governor to offer federal help.
His Democratic rival in the presidential race, Joe Biden, said the grand jury failed to deliver justice for Taylor but held out hope the federal probe of her death would do just that.
โ€œWe do not need to wait for the final judgment of that investigation to do more to deliver justice for Breonna,โ€ he added.
REUTERS

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