Myles Cosgrove: Court upholds firing of LMPD officer whose shot killed Breonna Taylor

By |2023-02-27T23:27:23-05:00February 27th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

A court has ruled that the ex-Louisville Metro officer who shot and killed Breonna Taylor in the botched 2020 raid was justly fired, meaning he won't be getting his job back.Myles Cosgrove was one of three officers who fired their guns that night in March as LMPD was serving a no-knock warrant.He was fired in 2021 by then-interim Chief Yvette Gentry for violating department policies that night.Investigators said he fired 16 rounds that night. Previous: Merit Board upholds firing of Myles CosgroveLast April, he filed a lawsuit against LMPD, its merit board and the city, saying his firing was unconstitutional. He sued to be reinstated and get back pay and benefits.A Jefferson County Circuit Court recently found the merit board had "substantial evidence upon which to base their decision" and upheld his firing.Read the entire ruling here. As for the other officers involved, Jonathan Mattingly, who was shot that night, ended up retiring from the force. Brett Hankison, who faced three wanton endangerment charges, was acquitted.He then was charged federally for use of excessive force. The trial is expected to happen in October. LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A court has ruled that the ex-Louisville Metro officer who shot and killed Breonna Taylor in the botched 2020 raid was justly fired, meaning he won't be getting his job back.Myles Cosgrove was one of three officers who fired their guns that night in March as LMPD was serving a no-knock warrant.

Judge upholds termination of former LMPD detective who fired fatal shot in Breonna Taylor raid

By |2023-02-27T23:27:25-05:00February 27th, 2023|Breonna Taylor, Election 2020|

Myles Cosgrove was fired in January 2021 for use of excessive force after he fired 16 shots into Breonna Taylor's apartment in March 2020. LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A former Louisville Metro Police Department detective has been fighting to get his job back after he was involved in the raid which led to Breonna Taylor's death. A judge recently ruled against Myles Cosgrove's appeal. Cosgrove was fired in January 2021 for use of excessive force after he fired 16 shots into Breonna Taylor's apartment, including the shot that killed Taylor, during a botched raid in March 2020. Police said Cosgrove failed to identify a target during the incident, which led to one of Cosgrove’s rounds fatally wounding Taylor. LMPD’s Merit Board upheld the decision to terminate Cosgrove with a 5-2 vote in December 2021. On Feb. 24, Judge Melissa Logan Bellows in Jefferson Circuit Court issued an order stating the decision by LMPD’s Merit Board was justified, denying Cosgrove’s appeal. [embedded content] The judge said the principles of "target identification" and "target isolation" are not just an expectation for police, but even normal citizens should exercise the "highest degree of care" in determining whether or not they are shooting at a legitimate target. In his termination letter, former Interim LMPD Chief Yvette Gentry said Cosgrove did not properly identify a target when he fired over a dozen times into Taylor's Louisville apartment.  In violation of standard operating procedure, Cosgrove also failed to activate his body camera prior to executing the search warrant. Cosgrove said that "he should be held to a less stringent standard than an ordinary Kentucky resident, despite having considerably more legal privileges," according to court documents. In November, the Kentucky Law Enforcement Council voted not to revoke Cosgrove’s state peace officer certification, which means he could get a job in another agency in the Commonwealth. Make it easy to keep up-to-date with more stories like this. Download the WHAS11 News app now. For Apple or Android users. Have a news tip? Email [email protected], visit our Facebook page or Twitter feed.

Court upholds firing of Louisville police officer who fatally shot Breonna Taylor

By |2023-02-27T23:27:27-05:00February 27th, 2023|Breonna Taylor, Election 2020|

A Jefferson County Circuit Court judge on Monday upheld the firing of Louisville Metro Police Officer Myles Cosgrove, who federalinvestigators determined fired the bullets that killed Breonna Taylor in March of 2020.Cosgrove was fired from the department in January 2021 for failing to properly identify a threat before firing 16 rounds into Taylor’s apartment. He unsuccessfully appealed his termination to the Police Merit Board later that year, arguing that the “shadowy figure” and “flashes of light” Cosgrove said he was firing at were enough to justify the use of deadly force. After a four-day hearing, the board voted 5-2 to keep Cosgrove from returning to LMPD. Attorneys representing Cosgrove then appealed that decision last April.On Monday, Circuit Court Judge Melissa Logan Bellows ruled against Cosgrove, upholding the Merit Board’s decision.“The principles of target identification and isolation are not simply part of police training, but part of the law of self-defense itself,” Bellows wrote. “Even normal citizens must exercise the ‘highest degree of care’ in ascertaining whether they are shooting at a legitimate target.”Bellows wrote that Cosgrove’s attorneys appeared to be arguing that he shouldbe "held to a less stringent standard than an ordinary Kentucky resident, despite having considerably more legal privileges."During his appeal to the Merit Board, Cosgrove also argued that his firing waspolitically motivated. Former Deputy Police Chief LaVita Chavous testified that she overheard Mayor Greg Fischer say he wished he could fire the officers involved in Taylor’s killing during a meeting in 2020.But Bellows said Monday that there was no evidence suggesting Fischer unduly pressured LMPD leaders or the Merit Board to fire Cosgrove.“Put simply, while Cosgrove has provided certain evidence that his firing could have been politically motivated, he has not provided sufficient evidence to prove that it was, especially in an appellate setting,” shesaid.Cosgrove is one of the only officers involved in the 2020 raid on Taylor’s apartment not to face additional criminal charges for his actions, despite an FBI ballistics report claiming he fired the fatal shots.Former officers Joshua Jaynes and Kyle Meany are currently facing four federal charges,including obstruction and civil rights violations. Both were involved in securing the search warrant for Taylor’s apartment, which federal prosecutors say included statements the officers knew were false.Former Detective Brett Hankison, who was present at the raid, has also been charged with civil rights violations for firing through a covered window as police attempted to enter Taylor’s apartment in the middle of the night. All three officers have pleaded not guilty and their trials are expected to take place later this year.Last November, the Kentucky Law Enforcement Council voted not to revoke Cosgrove’s police officer certification, meaning he could get a job elsewhere in the state.

Court upholds termination decision for former LMPD detective Myles Cosgrove – WAVE 3

By |2023-02-27T23:27:29-05:00February 27th, 2023|Breonna Taylor, Election 2020|

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WAVE) - A former Louisville Metro Police detective who has been fighting to get his job back following the death of Breonna Taylor during an attempted raid on her home has lost another appeal.Myles Cosgrove was fired in Jan. 2021 for use of excessive force after firing 16 shots into Taylor’s apartment in March 2020. Police said Cosgrove failed to identify a target during the incident, which led to one of Cosgrove’s rounds hitting and killing Taylor during the raid.LMPD’s Merit Board upheld the decision to fire Cosgrove in Dec. 2021.On Friday, Judge Melissa Logan Bellows in Jefferson Circuit Court issued the order stating the decision by LMPD’s Merit Board was justified and that Cosgrove’s appeal was denied.“Given the evidence presented in the record, the Court must find that the Police Merit Board had substantial evidence upon which to base their decision, were thus not arbitrary in their decision, and as such must be affirmed,” the court document reads.The judge said the principles of target identification and isolation are not just part of police training but part of self-defense law, and that even normal citizens should be upheld by those standards.According to court documents, Cosgrove argued “that he should be held to a less stringent standard than an ordinary Kentucky resident, despite having considerably more legal privileges.”In November, the Kentucky Law Enforcement Council voted not to revoke Cosgrove’s state peace officer certification, which is required for him to be a police officer within the commonwealth.Copyright 2023 WAVE. All rights reserved.

Welcome to the Predator State – TomDispatch.com

By |2023-02-26T19:52:13-05:00February 26th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

Where the Scorpions on the Corner Just Might Kill You To residents of Memphis’s resource-poor, predominantly nonwhite neighborhoods, the Scorpions were easy to spot. The plainclothes patrols were known for driving their unmarked Dodge Chargers through the streets, often all too recklessly, sowing fear as they went, spitting venom from their windows, jumping out with guns drawn at the slightest sign of an infraction.On the night of January 7th, Tyre Nichols was two minutes from home when members of that squad pulled him over. Probable cause: reckless driving (if you believe the official story). Five Scorpions, all of them trained use-of-force specialists, proceeded to take turns hitting him with everything they had, including boots, fists, and telescopic batons. The 29-year-old photographer died three days later. Cause of death? “Excessive bleeding due to severe beating.” A body-cam snuff film of sorts was later released, showing some of Nichols’s last moments. The video transcripts speak for themselves. Officer to Tyre:“You’re gonna get your ass blown the fuck up. Oh, I’m gonna knock your ass the fuck out!” Tyre to officers:“OK. You guys are really doing a lot right now…” — “Lay down!”— “Stop! I’m just trying to go home.”— “Spray him! Spray him!”— “Stop! I’m not doing anything.”— “Tase him! Tase him!” Tyre cries out:“Mom! Mom!” Officer to Tyre:“Watch out! I’m gonna baton the fuck out of you!” — “Dude, hit him!”— “Hit him!”— “Hit him!”— “Mom…” Plainclothes Paramilitaries Welcome to America’s emerging predator state. Memphis is anything but an outlier. There are thousands of “elite” teams like that city’s Scorpion unit and they come in all calibers, shapes, and sizes. They range from specially trained teams in small-town police departments to sprawling “anti-crime” squads in big cities like Atlanta and New York, not to mention federal tactical units like the Border Patrol’s BORTAC and counter-terrorism task forces like the one that killed Manuel Terán in Georgia last month. Beyond the scary names, such specialized units tend to share some other characteristics. In their warlike tactics, their strategic outlook, and their often-violent subculture — if not always in their uniforms — they are virtually indistinguishable from their counterparts in the military. In their “wars” on crime, drugs, and terror, they work with a similar playbook imported from U.S. combat missions overseas but seemingly stripped of any reference to the rules of war. They conduct themselves, in other words, as plainclothes paramilitaries in America’s urban war zones (or what they like to call “hot spots”). Like Army Special Operations forces, they are regularly charged with the execution of “time-sensitive,” “clandestine,” and often “unilateral” missions — with or without the support of the local population — using “assurance, deterrence, and coercion” to fight the enemies of the state and exert control over “hostile, denied, or politically sensitive environments.” What’s more, these units operate with a legal guarantee of “qualified immunity” for violence against civilians. In other words, despite the recent Memphis exception, they normally have near-total impunity when it comes to violent offenses which, had they been committed in another country, might be classified as war crimes, crimes of aggression, or even crimes against humanity. For offenses of this nature, the United States is itself an international hot spot. In the course of a given year, according to one recent study, our law enforcement agencies were responsible for 13% of all fatalities caused by the police globally, even though Americans make up just 4% of the world’s population. And as investigative journalism has revealed, specialized units like the Scorpions are responsible for a wildly disproportionate share of those deaths. Take the New York City Police Department. Since 2000, its own use-of-force reports show that nearly one in three police killings have been by non-uniformed officers, especially “anti-crime” plainclothes units with paramilitary training and a long-standing reputation for terrorizing communities of color. Nearly a decade before the slaying of Tyre Nichols, there was, for instance, the murder of Eric Garner, a 43-year-old street vendor, “neighborhood peacekeeper,” and father of six. His life was snuffed out thanks to a police chokehold after he was stopped for selling “loosies,” unlicensed cigarettes, on a Staten Island street corner in the summer of 2014. (In the end, the only person to serve jail time in Garner’s death was the young filmmaker of color who had the courage to record the encounter.) Like the officers in the South Bronx who gunned down Amadou Diallo outside his home as he reached for his wallet, the ones in Queens who sprayed Sean Bell with 50 bullets on his wedding day, and the ones in Brooklyn who opened fire on a mentally ill man named Saheed Vassell in 2018, those responsible for Garner’s murder were members of the infamous “anti-crime” units whose work would become a blueprint for Scorpion-style policing. The force’s predatory philosophy is often summed up in a single sentence lifted from Ernest Hemingway’s 1936 (satirical) short story, “On the Blue Water.” Officers of the peace have been known to quote it, to wear it to work, and to plaster it on the walls of their precincts: “There is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never care for anything else thereafter.” In the words of one New Yorker, a nurse from Crown Heights who witnessed the killing of Vassell, “The undercovers think they have the authority to do anything they want. They hunt [people] — like us black people — down… They act tough… like they’re from a gang. But they’re only like that because they have a badge.” A History of Violence Against Women In December 2019, the city of Louisville, Kentucky, rolled out its version of the Scorpion unit. It was labeled the Place-Based Investigations Squad (PBI) and put under the aegis of its police department’s Criminal Interdiction Division. Following paid consultations with “problem-oriented” academics and police executives from other cities, the Louisville Metropolitan department implemented a then-little-known practice called “Place-Based Investigations of Violent Offender Territories,” or PIVOT. In the end, this would prove but a variation on an already all-too-familiar theme of hot-spot policing first pioneered by “police scientists” in Minneapolis some 30 years before George Floyd’s murder. (In fact, the use of the term “hot spots” can be traced back to the early years of World War II.) Under this model, police assets were to be specially directed toward a handful of hot spots or “chronically violent urban locations.” That such places were home to populations of disproportionately Black, Indigenous, and immigrant Americans will no longer shock anyone; nor that they overlapped strikingly with areas of concentrated impoverishment and “planned abandonment”; nor that an influx of heavily armed strangers was undoubtedly the last thing such communities needed from the government. All of this was beside the point. The “marginal deterrent effect” — the minimal difference such hot-spot policing purportedly made in the calculations of would-be criminals — was enough to keep most critics quiet. Three months after the rollout, the Place-Based Investigations Squad would play an integral part in the police raid that took the life of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman and emergency-room technician at the University of Louisville, accused of no crime, but executed anyway by three Louisville police officers standing in the hallway of her own home. Officers from the PBI Squad had requested and obtained five search warrants with “no-knock” clauses, including one for Ms. Taylor, acting on what one would later call a “gut feeling.” Within moments of the officers’ arrival at her apartment on the night of March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor lay dying, felled by six of 32 shots fired into her home. It would be 20 minutes before she even received medical attention — 15 minutes too late to save her life. Although four officers have now been federally charged for civil rights violations, and three stand accused of lying on the affidavit they used to secure the warrants, a grand jury ultimately failed to return a single indictment for the officers who opened fire. That night in 2020, Ms. Taylor joined a long litany of Black women, robbed of their lives while simply trying to live them by those supposedly tasked with their protection. According to the latest count, some 280 women have been slain in encounters with law enforcement over just the past five years. Researchers have found that women made up nearly half of all police-initiated contacts and Black women were three times more likely than white ones to experience the use of force during a police-initiated stop. “Elite” police units have played an outsized role in such state-sanctioned femicides. Take the case of India Kager, 27, a Navy vet killed by a tactical team in Virginia Beach in 2015, as she sat in her car with her four-month-old baby in the back. Or consider Atlanta’s RED DOG (short for “Run Every Drug Dealer Out of Georgia”) Unit. On November 21, 2006, plainclothes officers from that narcotics squad — having lied under oath to obtain a no-knock warrant — barged into the home of Kathryn Johnston, a 92-year-old grandmother, and promptly gunned her down. Drugs were then planted near her body in a sorry attempt at a cover-up. Disbanded or Rebranded? We’ve been here before: Officers are charged with second-degree murder. Sweeping reforms are promised. Controversial units are “deactivated,” their officers reassigned to other bureaus. We saw this with the Amadou Diallo protests and the New York Police Department’s Street Crimes Unit in the early 2000s. We saw it with Atlanta’s RED DOGs after the killing of Kathryn Johnston. We saw it with Louisville’s PBI Squad in the months following the murder of Breonna Taylor — and we’re seeing it now in the aftermath of the assault on Tyre Nichols. Count on this, however: as time passes and attention subsides, reforms are abandoned, charges are dropped, or the defendants found not guilty by juries of their peers. And special ops teams are rebranded and brought back to life under different names. Today, Atlanta’s “Titans” have replaced the “RED DOGs” of old, while the very police executive who ran the old unit, Cerelyn “CJ” Davis, was made commissioner of the Memphis police department. The city of Memphis has also sought guidance from Ray Kelly, who was New York police commissioner during a particularly trigger-happy period in that department’s history (including the deaths of Sean Bell, Ousmane Zongo, Timothy Stansbury, Ramarley Graham, and Kimani Gray). Meanwhile, New York City Mayor Eric Adams, himself a veteran of a plainclothes police unit, is touting his “Neighborhood Safety Teams” (along with another elite strike force inherited from his predecessors, the “Strategic Response Group”) as the basis for a whole new approach to policing. In truth, they are simply picking up where the Street Crimes Unit left off. The only real differences: longer guns, modified uniforms, and body cameras that can be turned on or off at will. The names change, but the strategy (such as it is) remains the same and the body counts only climb higher. “Collateral Damage” and the War at Home Yet such police killings are not truly local matters. The final piece of the puzzle is the national security state, itself a predatory entity and the source of much of the surplus that supplies the police with significant military-grade weaponry and the bipartisan consensus that keeps the dollars flowing. Local police agencies would not have anything like the arsenals they have today — ones that would be the envy of many of the world’s militaries — without the largesse of the Pentagon’s popular 1033 program. For years, it has been arming police departments around the country in a distinctly military fashion, sometimes even with weapons directly off the battlefields of this country’s distant wars. Thanks to that program, the Memphis police department has managed to obtain a significant stockpile of high-powered rifles and multiple armored personnel carriers, while the State of Tennessee alone has received $131 million worth of weaponry from the Department of Defense. Meanwhile, paving new ground, the Special Operations Bureau of the San Francisco Police Department has procured unmanned, remotely piloted killer robots with names like TALON and DRAGON RUNNER. It is now advertising its intent to use them as a “deadly force option” in criminal apprehensions and other incidents like “riots, insurrection, or potentially violent demonstrations.” None of this would be possible without the support of politicians from both parties. The 2023 budget agreed upon by both parties, for instance, promises $37 billion in new spending on law enforcement — with double-digit percentage increases in discretionary funding for local police departments, above and beyond the nearly $1 trillion for the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security. As a “moral statement,” that document bears a striking resemblance to its predecessors, backing the blue with billions of public tax dollars, while bearing witness to the priorities of a government on the warpath against enemies domestic and foreign. Zooming out, we can see this kind of predatory policing for the national crisis it really is. In recent decades, according to a definitive study published in the British medical journal The Lancet, more than 30,000 American civilians have lost their lives in encounters with law enforcement, a figure perhaps best compared to the rates of “collateral damage” in war-torn places like Ukraine, Gaza, Yemen, or the Sahel. And whatever we call them, “elite” units like the Scorpions have played a leading role in that carnage. From their basic training to their advanced technology and heavy weaponry, they are increasingly cast as the protagonists in what has become America’s homeland theater of war, producing content of spectacular violence as this country’s war machine turns inward. At a time when significant crossover can be seen between law enforcement and the white nationalist militia movement, it should be obvious that police departments are, among other things, playing a dangerous game with democracy. With Donald Trump and his crew still going full Blue Lives Matter and the Biden administration failing to pass meaningful police reform, count on another bloody harvest of police violence in 2023 and 2024. In the event of sustained civil conflict, there is little mystery about which side some elite police units would choose to fight on or who would find themselves in the scopes of their semi-automatic rifles. Still, the predator state is not invincible, nor is its ascendancy inevitable. After all, the claims of police departments to legitimacy rest upon the support of elected officials who remain vulnerable to popular pressure, while the very existence of such paramilitary units depends on their access to the public purse. In a very real sense, then, they can still be fired, or at least defunded. For now, in the absence of consequences, the hunt for humans goes on uninterrupted and that’s likely to continue as long as so many Americans remain willing to put up with it. Copyright 2023 Michael Gould-Wartofsky Featured image: Bradley Manning rally [14] by Ben Schumin is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 / Flickr Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel, Songlands (the final one in his Splinterlands series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John Dower’s The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, and Ann Jones’s They Were Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars: The Untold Story.

#SayTheirNames. Three years after Breonna Taylor, what has Kentucky learned? | Opinion

By |2023-02-24T22:25:03-05:00February 24th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

Linda BlackfordFebruary 24, 2023, 8:28 AMEvery second Saturday, poet and activist Hannah Drake stands on the muddy banks of the Ohio River under the columns of Interstate 64 and recites people’s names.Aggie and Dan and Maria and Sam are just a few of the enslaved people who lived and worked in bondage in Louisville just across the broad river from freedom, people hidden, forgotten and unknown.“Slavery is the story of America,” Drake said. “It’s the story of America that we don’t want to talk about.”The names that Drake and her partner, Josh Miller, at the nonprofit Ideas xLab have found, are emblazoned on the two benches that overlook the Ohio, harnessed to the ground with the kind of chains used to bind humans together as they made their way to the slave market at Second and Main. Cement footsteps point toward Indiana, with loose buttons, which the enslaved would leave behind at markets as a reminder.Before this small corner of riverbank was a reality, Drake wrote the poem “Finding Me:”Can I find pieces of your memory in cotton fields and red mud?Scattered bones in unmarked graves that attempt to erase you from historyBut you were here. You were always here.You existed. Unknown no longer. I found your name ... I found youAnd in finding you, I found me.These days, people bring Drake the names. They say ‘my family enslaved people and here are some of the names,’ they have on pieces of paper or old ledgers,” Drake said. “People held on to the information because they’re ashamed.”One woman emailed her a copy of a ledger from her family, showing they had owned 50 people, a huge number for the non-plantation slave economy of Kentucky.“I say ‘you don’t have to carry that shame but you’re holding onto it because you are ashamed.’ The truth sets people free, not your shame.”Drake takes a more pragmatic approach to historical guilt, one that might be more acceptable to many. Think of our racial past like breast cancer or diabetes, she says. “Talking about cancer does not cause cancer, but it might cause someone to get a checkup. It’s education and learning and growth.”The doctor doesn’t hate you, the doctor is interested in your past, what you ate, what your risk factors are. The doctor wants to heal you and he can’t do that until he understands what’s wrong.That’s why Drake writes and speaks these names. Why, when we learned about how Breonna Taylor was killed in March 2020, she spoke her name over and over again in poems and speeches and protests. Breonna was killed in March, but as Drake points out, her name was hidden until May, when an explosive racial reckoning began in Kentucky and across the country.Hannah Drake is photographed by her (Un)Known Project installation near the Ohio River in downtown Louisville.Black historyThe (Un)known Project is an interesting one to ponder in the waning days of Black History Month, three years and less than a mile away from the Breonna Taylor protests in Jefferson Square Park. We know more than we ever have about Kentucky’s history of enslavement — such as a new book on our beloved state song that peels back some unsavory truths, or new scholarship of the lives of the enslaved in a state that didn’t talk much about it. As UK historian Gerald Smith wrote in a new book he edited, “Slavery and Freedom in the Bluegrass State: Revisiting My Old Kentucky Home: “Like much of the state’s racial past, the search is ongoing for truth and reconciliation. The killing of Breonna Taylor was an awakening for a state that had been lulled to sleep for generations by the melody of ‘My Old Kentucky Home.’ But now is the time to keep revisiting that past to better understand the present and to build and reshape our interpretation of Kentucky history.”Sometimes, though, it seems as though only small circles of activists, artists, and academics are willing to do that. These days, people are more interested in complaining about “wokeness” than police brutality, more concerned with banning the books and hiding the history that is, as Drake says, so central to our past.Three years after Breonna Taylor, where are we? In the midst of another legislative session and a GOP gubernatorial primary where Taylor’s name is conspicuously absent. Instead we have bills that try to ban books about the civil rights movement, or govern what “controversies” teachers can teach. In Frankfort the prevailing narrative is that the Breonna Taylor protests, “riots” is the word you hear more, practically destroyed Louisville, a concept that might surprise the tourists who filled Main Street on a recent Saturday afternoon. Just last year, Sen. Danny Carroll filed legislation, not to address police brutality, but to allow police to arrest anyone who called them mean names.The legislature banned some use of no knock warrants statewide. Its main answer to the racial justice protests was the West End TIF, a sprawling, amorphous economic development tool that works poorly at the best of times, and in this case, would have all safeguards taken away.Attorney General Daniel Cameron could not convince a grand jury to indict any Louisville police in Breonna Taylor’s death, (just for firing into a neighbor’s apartment). A year later, federal authorities charged four of them. Cameron is now the front-runner in the GOP primary with a campaign that stresses law and justice. He is the first Black candidate elected to statewide office and the first to run for governor but shows little interest in the issues that affect most Black people in the state. His website currently boasts that he led the fight against Critical Race Theory.One reason the GOP political majority in this state doesn’t talk about these issues is because they don’t have to. The Black population is just 8 percent, mostly found in cities like Lexington and Louisville. Thanks to gerrymandering, those representatives are largely outnumbered. As Democrats used to do when they were the majority, Republicans have largely ignored the current minority, choosing to sideline their bills by not even assigning them to committees.Kentucky state Rep. Keturah Herron, D-Lousivlle, is photographed at Jefferson Square Park in downtown Louisville.Little changeOne of the newest members of that minority, Rep. Keturah Herron, D-Louisville, says life for many in Louisville is largely unchanged three years later.“People in the West End (of Louisville) are still facing food insecurity, housing insecurity,” she said. “It’s hard, I don’t know what the tangible things are that have changed.”We met in Jefferson Square Park, sometimes known as Injustice Square Park, which now has a historical marker for the 2020 Racial Justice Protests. Herron said she’s seen more tangible change from the protests in Lexington, where Black women swept county offices in 2022, including County Attorney, Commonwealth Attorney, and three Black women now serving on the Fayette Urban County Council. In particular County Attorney Angela Evans crushed incumbent Larry Roberts who refused to drop charges against Black Lives Matter protesters.She sees Kentucky’s history, like America’s, as cyclical. We move forward, we go back. As an example, Herron is working on the same kinds of gun violence programs that one of her predecessors, Rep. Eleanor Jordan worked on in 1996.“When you look at the history, we want to talk about the issues, but people don’t want to hear Breonna Taylor’s name anymore,” she said. “Kentuckians have always want to deny their role in racism and slavery and the plight of Black Kentuckians. And poor white Kentuckians.”As a new lawmaker, Herron is trying to be pragmatic in working with Republican counterparts, learning to understand the byzantine state budget system, and trying to get more federal dollars to flow for projects like violence reduction.“There’s so much work to do and we just have to keep doing it,” she said.That’s also the consensus of Rev. L. Clark Williams in Lexington, who worked with the Black Faith Leaders coalition to ban no knock warrants in Lexington. He also chairs The People’s Campaign, which tries to get people across the state more engaged with electoral politics.“Whenever you have the kind of majority Republicans have in the Legislature, you see clearly that they have the ability to do whatever they want to do,” Williams said. “The onus on those of us who see that as problematic is to look at ways to put some kind of checks and balances.”The electorate did that last fall when they rejected an amendment to give the legislature more power. Whether the electorate will feel that checks and balances should be maintained with a Democratic governor and a Republican legislature will be seen. But those who feel disenfranchised right now have to put in the work.“The key to continued progress is around building strong organizations that can sustain the work,” Williams said. “The opportunities that arise out of tragedies are just that for moments in time — those will not sustain progress. The way to sustain progress is commitment to the work to get changes that we’re seeking.”The (Un)Known Project installation near the Ohio River in downtown Louisville, Ky., includes benches with the names of enslaved Kentuckians.Doing the workDrake and Miller would like to see the (Un)Known Project expand to other states, where people are anxious to uncover more names and more stories about our ignored past and present. Someone who heard about the project recently connected Drake to her one of her own ancestors, an enslaved woman in South Carolina, through paperwork and DNA research. She had not been able to trace her family back more than two generations. It’s hard and meticulous work to find people who were hidden because it didn’t fit our national narratives about the land of the free.America can only get healthy, Drake believes, when it faces the facts about its past. Then we can all do the work to get better, even in Kentucky. When we face the facts about slavery and its legacy in poverty, criminal justice, inequality, then maybe we can move forward.But “until Ky faces itself we will be here again and again and again,” she said. “And I hate to say that, but it’s just the truth. we continue to go around the same mountain. We have a time to get something right, to do something different.“We are supposed to be learning something and we keep missing it.”

Remembering Ahmaud Arbery Three Years Later: The Murder In Broad Daylight That …

By |2023-02-23T23:34:23-05:00February 23rd, 2023|Breonna Taylor, Election 2020|

Cellphone video footage of a Black man being hunted and killed by three white men in south Georgia in 2020 was a catalyst that led to a racial awakening that evoked change and trigged white guilt in America. Ahmaud Arbery fought for his life on Feb. 23, 2020, after being cornered by father and son Gregory and Travis McMichael and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan. However, his years of athletic training did not prepare him for the power of Travis’ shotgun. BRUNSWICK, GA – NOVEMBER 24: A woman carries a portrait of Ahmaud Arbery outside the Glynn County Courthouse as the jury deliberates in the trial of the killers of Ahmaud Arbery on November 24, 2021, in Brunswick, Georgia. Greg McMichael, his son Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan were found guilty in the February 2020 fatal shooting of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images) The specter of white men chasing a young Black man in pickup trucks permeated the minds of Americans and fueled impending civil unrest of historic magnitude. It led to significant changes in policy written into law when scenes of racial killings of Black people were more familiar in the South. Georgia NAACP president Gerald Griggs said Arbery’s murder was a “modern-day lynching” that built up to the global outrage over George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis police.  Video of Arbery’s killing surfaced online on May 3, 2020, a little more than three weeks before Derek Chauvin pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck. A Black woman, Breonna Taylor, was also killed in Louisville, Kentucky, in a botched narcotics raid in March 2020. The string of deaths sparked peaceful protests and riots starting in Minnesota to as far as the capital city of Australia. “We were inside during the pandemic, and we all saw the video, and it was the impetus for people to go outside,” Griggs told Atlanta Black Star. “So, I think that it was the impetus similar to the Emmett Till case for the rebirth of the social justice movement, just as Emmett’s case was the impetus for the birth of the civil rights movement.” Two white men admitted to torturing and killing 14-year-old Emmett in Mississippi in 1955. The boy’s mother, Mamie Elizabeth Till-Mobley, made it a point to showcase his battered body at his funeral to expose the world to racial violence. Till-Mobley’s stance has been credited as a turning point in the civil rights movement of the late 1950s and 60s. Sixty-five years later and multiple decades after the Civil Rights Act of 1965, the McMichaels chased Arbery in the Brunswick, Georgia, neighborhood. They believed the former high school football player was behind a series of burglaries after he was spotted near a home under construction. Williams recorded the event on his cellphone. The father-son duo trailed Arbery as he jogged away from their neighbor’s unoccupied house. After catching up with the Black man, Travis fought off Arbery’s hold on the barrel of his shotgun and fired the fatal shots. Gregory McMichael, who had a long history in law enforcement, argued that the men were attempting to make a citizen’s arrest. The video’s release spurred outrage from local, state and national leaders. Georgia General Christopher Carr requested the FBI’s involvement just days after its release. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle moved to repeal the 1863 law in May 2021. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp was a strong proponent of the measure, which made it illegal for private citizens to arrest others. The bill was stripped, leaving the right to retail business owners, restaurant owners in certain situations and weight inspectors, licensed private security guards, and private investigators while on duty. Law enforcement officers can still detain citizens outside of their jurisdiction. Georgians can still detain someone in cases of self-defense or to protect their property, but the new law restricts the use of deadly force in those situations. The previous version of the law allowed a civilian to arrest someone if they witnessed a crime or had “immediate knowledge” the offender committed one. If that crime was a felony and the suspect attempted to escape, the law also allowed a person to detain a suspect. “Ahmaud was the victim of vigilante-style violence that has no place in our country or in our state,” Kemp said during a bill signing ceremony on May 10, 2021. “It quickly became clear to me and many other state leaders that we needed to act.” BRUNSWICK, GA – NOVEMBER 23: Wanda Cooper-Jones, mother of Ahmaud Arbery, leaves the Glynn County Courthouse as jury deliberations begin in the trial of the killers of her son on November 23, 2021, in Brunswick, Georgia. Greg McMichael, his son Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan are charged with the February 2020 fatal shooting of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images) While the elder McMichael sought to justify the shooting with the state law signed during the Civil War era, court proceedings revealed he called his ex-boss, former Brunswick District Attorney Jackie Johnson, hours after the crime for advice. Johnson reportedly connected McMichael to an attorney who later arranged for the video footage to be leaked to the public. After the release, McMichael referred to the move as “interference” in a voice message to his former prosecutor boss. The three men were later arrested and found guilty of state and federal offenses. Their federal convictions were the first for federal hate crimes in Georgia.  “In the aftermath of the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, Georgians and citizens across the country sought answers, justice, and a better way forward,” Kemp spokesperson Garrison Douglas told Atlanta Black Star. Arbery’s death also pushed the Georgia Legislature to pass its first hate crime law that enhances sentencing for crimes motivated by bias. State lawmakers passed hate crime legislation in 2000, but the Georgia Supreme Court struck it down four years later because the measure did not specify what actions would be penalized. In 2019, a year before Arbery’s death, the House passed the current measure, but it had been stalled until after the jogger’s death. “Ahmaud Arbery should still be with us today, and that is why Governor Kemp signed the state’s first hate crimes legislation into law and the repeal of the citizen’s arrest provisions,” Garrison said in an email statement. “Though these important measures could never bring back Ahmaud for his loved ones, they were historic steps of progress.” Griggs, however, said local prosecutors need to be more proactive in using the hate crime statute. More importantly, the scales of justice have not been thoroughly weighed in the case, he added. The attorney and civil rights advocate is calling for Johnson, the former Brunswick district attorney charged with meddling in the police investigation into Arbery’s killing, to be convicted and sentenced. He also wants Waycross Judicial Circuit District Attorney George Barnhill, who declined to prosecute the men, citing self-defense, to face charges for allegedly conspiring with Johnson. Johnson’s involvement in the case led to her being voted out of office. In January 2022, Barnhill announced that he would not seek re-election. Arbery’s death also has been attributed to subsequent changes in Brunswick’s city council and Glynn County Police Department.

Kentucky Democrat wins special election to fill seat in state’s GOP-dominated Senate

By |2023-02-23T00:28:12-05:00February 22nd, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

Democrat Cassie Chambers Armstrong has won a special election for a seat in the Republican-dominated Kentucky Senate, where she'll succeed the state's newest member of Congress.Armstrong, a Louisville Metro councilwoman, won with 77% of the vote in Tuesday's election, defeating Republican Misty Glin, media outlets reported.She will succeed Morgan McGarvey, who was elected to Congress last November. McGarvey served 10 years in the state Senate, including four as the chamber's top-ranking Democrat.LAWYERS FOR 2 KENTUCKY OFFICERS CHARGED IN BREONNA TAYLOR WARRANT CASE GRANTED MORE TIME Democrat Cassie Chambers has been elected to fill the empty seat in Kentucky's state Senate.

Lawyers get more time in Breonna Taylor warrant case | Michigan Lawyers Weekly

By |2023-02-23T00:28:15-05:00February 22nd, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

Lawyers for two former Kentucky police officers charged with conspiring to falsify the Breonna Taylor search warrant were granted more time to review the case’s massive trove of evidence. U.S. District Judge Charles Simpson agreed to reconvene the attorneys in May with a status hearing. Former Louisville officers Joshua Jaynes and Kyle Meany are charged with criminal civil rights violations that carry a maximum penalty of life in prison. Federal prosecutors have said Jaynes inserted false information into the warrant used to knock down Taylor’s door before she was shot to death by officers on March 13, 2020. Meany and another former officer, Kelly Goodlett, also knew the warrant had bad information, federal prosecutors have said. Goodlett pleaded guilty and is expected to testify at Jaynes’ and Meany’s trial. Brett Hankison, the only former officer facing charges who was involved in the raid, has a federal trial date set for Oct. 30. Prosecutors said during a Feb. 21 telephone conference with Judge Simpson that they have turned over a million pages of evidence and documents to defense attorneys in the case.

Defense attorneys in Breonna Taylor case gets extension | whas11.com

By |2023-02-22T01:29:27-05:00February 22nd, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The Breonna Taylor civil rights case against two former Louisville police officers was back in court. Joshua Jaynes and Kyle Meany are accused of falsifying a search warrant which led to Taylor’s death in March 2020. Federal Judge Charles Simpson agreed during Tuesday’s status conference to give defense attorneys another 90 days to comb through what he referred to as a “massive amount of discovery.” Prosecutors said they provided three more evidentiary rounds of documents last week which now total more than one million pages. Attorney Thomas Clay, who represents Jaynes, said he has never had a case with more than a million pages. Another status conference has been set for May 24. ►Make it easy to keep up-to-date with more stories like this. Download the WHAS11 News app now. For Apple or Android users.  

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