Lawyers get more time in Breonna Taylor warrant case – Spectrum News

By |2023-02-22T01:29:29-05:00February 21st, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Lawyers for two former Kentucky police officers charged with conspiring to falsify the Breonna Taylor search warrant were granted more time Tuesday to review the case's massive trove of evidence. What You Need To Know  Lawyers for Joshua Jaynes and Kyle Meany have more time to go through case evidence  The group will reconvene in May for a status hearing  The pair are charged with criminal civil rights violations The maximum penalty is life in prison 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 telephone conference with Judge Simpson Tuesday that they have turned over a million pages of evidence and documents to defense attorneys in the case.

What decision was made in the Breonna Taylor case? | The US Sun

By |2023-02-22T01:29:38-05:00February 21st, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

BREONNA Taylor was shot dead by police at her home in Louisville, Kentucky, on March 13, 2020.The 26-year-old frontline medic, who worked for two local hospitals, had no criminal history, which led to protests and a demand for justice. 2Breonna Taylor was shot and killed in her apartment on March 13, 2020Credit: AP What decision was made in the Breonna Taylor case? On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor was shot in her apartment during a botched drug raid. At the time, cops were looking for Jamarcus Glover, who allegedly dated Taylor two years ago, but he had previously been arrested in a separate raid ten miles away on the same night officers broke into her apartment. As cops entered the home, Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker - who was not the man wanted by cops - fired one shot with his legally held weapon. Walker said he thought the offices were burglars. Her death ultimately played a large role in the Black Lives Matter movement, which later led to several more protests following to May 2020 death of George Floyd. At first, the officers involved were cleared by a grand jury, but then in August 2022, a federal grand jury returned two indictments on former Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) Detective Joshua Jaynes, LMPD Sergeant Kyle Meany, and LMPD Detective Brett Hankison. Janes and Meany were charged with federal civil rights and obstruction offenses for their roles in preparing and approving a false search warrant affidavit and Hankison was charged with civil rights offenses for firing his weapon into her apartment through a window and door, according to a Department of Justice press release. Former LMPD Detective Kelly Goodlett was also charged with conspiring with Jaynes to falsify the search warrant and attempting to cover it up following her death. Most read in The US Sun “On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor should have awakened in her home as usual, but tragically she did not,” Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke said in a statement. “Since the founding of our nation, the Bill of Rights to the United States Constitution has guaranteed that all people have a right to be secure in their homes, free from false warrants, unreasonable searches and the use of unjustifiable and excessive force by the police. "These indictments reflect the Justice Department’s commitment to preserving the integrity of the criminal justice system and to protecting the constitutional rights of every American.” 2Officer Kelly Hanna Goodlett pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy in August 2022Credit: Louisville Metro Police Department Where are the former officers now? Shortly after the grand jury indictment, Goodlett pleaded guilty in federal court to one count of conspiracy, according to The New York Times. At the time, she said that she knew there wasn't enough evidence to support the warrant but did not object when her former colleague falsified the report, The New York Times notes. She is expected to be sentenced at a later date but will remain out on bond until then. She faces a maximum prison term of five years. As for Jaynes and Meany, they ultimately pleaded not guilty to their charges and are expected to face trial at a later date. Their trial was originally scheduled for October 11, 2022, but Judge Charles Simpson pushed it back, saying that the timeline wasn't feasible given the amount of evidence the defense attorneys have to go through, according to ABC affiliate WHAS11. Hankison, who was previously found not guilty on three counts of felony wanton endangerment in relation to Taylor's death, is also expected to face trial on October 30, 2023, according to ABC News.

Lawyers for 2 Kentucky officers charged in Breonna Taylor warrant case granted more time

By |2023-02-22T01:29:56-05:00February 21st, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

Lawyers for two former Kentucky police officers charged with conspiring to falsify the Breonna Taylor search warrant were granted more time Tuesday 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. ASBURY REVIVAL: PROFESSOR CALLS FOR END TO ‘PUBLIC PHASE’ AS SCHOOL SCRAMBLES TO ADDRESS OVERCROWDING Lawyers for the two officers involved in the Breonna Taylor warrant case were granted more time to review the case’s evidence. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 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 telephone conference with Judge Simpson Tuesday that they have turned over a million pages of evidence and documents to defense attorneys in the case.

Deric Lostutter Uses Activism to Impact Societal and Environmental Change – Digital Journal

By |2023-02-20T22:31:24-05:00February 20th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

PRESS RELEASEPublished February 20, 2023Knox County, Kentucky - On November 25, 2022, Deric Lostutter, a well-known activist and volunteer, hosted a fundraiser at the Icehouse Bar & Grill in Corbin, Kentucky, to raise money for the victims of the recent Club Q shooting in Colorado. The event featured Lostutter as the DJ, spinning tunes for a cause, and all proceeds went to the funeral expenses of Raymond Green Vance, who was the boyfriend of Kassandra Fierro. Fierro is the daughter of Richard M. Fierro, who disarmed the Club Q shooter and saved countless lives. This isn't the first time Lostutter has used his DJ skills to raise money for charity. In 2016, he was the DJ for a charity car show in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, which raised money for a local children's hospital. He also participated in the Walk of Dimes in Winston-Salem that same year, raising awareness about critical issues affecting moms and babies, from prematurity and health equity to maternal and infant mortality and morbidity. In 2016, Lostutter volunteered at God's Closet in Manchester, Kent providing clothing and other essentials to needy families. He also handed out school supplies and backpacks to underprivileged children at Shady Grove Wesleyan Church in Walkertown, North Carolina, and volunteered at the Clark County Homeless Coalition Homeless Shelter in Winchester, Clark County, Kentucky, in 2022. On November 5, 2015, Lostutter organized Lexington, Kentucky’s Million Mask March, a unanimous march that takes place all over the world to raise awareness of societal issues. The issue that Deric Lostutter chose to raise awareness for during the Lexington Million Mask March was police brutality on the impoverished citizens in Kentucky and unarmed people of color—an event that was a precursor to the Black Lives Matter movement and the Louisville, Kentucky Protests surrounding the murder of Breonna Taylor. Breonna Taylor’s death sparked worldwide outrage when police officers used a no-knock warrant to enter her home, shooting and killing Breonna Taylor. 4 former Louisville Police Officers are facing federal charges for falsifying a search warrant and writing a false report in the case, and one former Louisville Police Officer, Kelly Goodlett, has pled guilty and is awaiting federal sentencing. Lostutter's activism and volunteer experience date back even further, to 2014, when he worked as a photo and event coordinator for the Louisville, Kentucky Color Run, which raised money for charity and volunteered at various urban creek and stream cleanup events in Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky to help impact environmental change in 2014. When asked what inspired him to be so active in the community, Deric Lostutter replied, “We have to set an example for our children and leave them a better world for them to inherit.”  Lostutter’s activism began at an early age, cleaning up trash along roadsides in King, North Carolina while attending West Stokes High School, and creating a group of friends that stood up to bullies who were bullying other classmates. Lostutter's dedication to making a difference in his community is admirable, and his efforts to raise money for the victims of the Club Q shooting are just the latest example of his commitment to helping others. His past experiences with volunteering and activism show that he is a passionate and dedicated individual who is always looking for ways to make a positive impact on the world around him.Media ContactCompany Name: Deric LostutterContact Person: Media RelationsEmail: Send EmailCountry: United StatesWebsite: https://www.dericlostutter.com

What Happened to 70 Cops Involved in Notorious Killings – Business Insider

By |2023-02-19T17:38:23-05:00February 19th, 2023|Breonna Taylor, Election 2020|

Redeem now The police killing of Tyre Nichols in Memphis, Tennessee last month resulted in five officers involved being charged with murder and fired from the Memphis Police Department. Nichols's killing was notable for its apparent cruelty: Officers pepper sprayed, kicked, and punched an unarmed man to death. Footage from a nearby pole camera captured much of the assault, as well as officers standing around Nichols as he lay grievously injured. One detective took a photo and texted it to at least five others. The Nichols case was unusual for the speed at which the officers involved were fired and charged, but the incident itself shared many similarities to other instances of egregious police violence that have risen to national attention in past decades. These killings often draw intense public scrutiny, in some cases prompting departments to shut down elite "street crime" squads like Memphis's Scorpion unit or forcing lawmakers to question police budgets and tactics. The victims in these cases become nationally known and their names — George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Amadou Diallo — rallying cries against police abuses.Police officers involved in the deaths have become an intense focus of investigation, protest, and media coverage. Ultimately, though, most of those officers fall out of public consciousness.  Despite being at the heart of some of the most defining incidents in modern policing, most of the officers involved continue to live their lives under the radar.    Insider's review of 72 cops involved in two dozen of the most notorious police killings of the past 30 years shows the many different paths officers have taken. Some dwindled into obscurity after resigning or being fired. Others stayed on the force and even received promotions. A few became pro-police rallying points, while others ended up incarcerated for their crimes — an extreme rarity for police who kill people on the job. Fewer than 2% of police officers who shoot and kill people while on duty are charged with murder or manslaughter, and fewer still are convicted, according to data collected by Philip Stinson, a professor at Bowling Green State University who studies police shootings. Despite nationwide protests demanding greater police accountability, that figure hasn't changed markedly since 2005, the first year Stinson began collecting data."Every time there's a big case, we think, 'maybe this is the case where something changes,'" he said. "But it doesn't." Prosecutors in most states still face steep obstacles to building criminal cases against officers. More departments have adopted body-worn cameras, but officers often fail to use them appropriately. Officers and police unions continue to close ranks around their colleagues who have been accused of using excessive force.There's no nationwide view into what happens to officers involved in egregious incidents of violence. A 2021 bill, the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, would have created a nationwide database of police misconduct, but that legislation stalled and withered in a Republican-controlled Senate. Insider attempted to contact the officers named in this article, but did not receive any replies to requests for comment. Multiple officers could also not be reached for comment.The incidents that Insider reviewed, focusing on those that rose to national media and received mention in thousands of news clips, are not representative of officer-involved killings as a whole. Instead, these cases show how officers involved in high-profile killings like the one in Memphis last month can end up anywhere from behind bars to back on the force. The cops who left the forceMany of the officers involved in high profile police killings resigned under public pressure or were fired by their departments following the incidents, but either never faced charges or were acquitted of criminal wrongdoing. These former cops are a grab bag of outcomes. Some fought unsuccessfully to be reinstated, while others drifted into different lines of work — sometimes with their past following them to their new professions.Two of the four officers who fired their weapons in the 1999 killing of Amadou Diallo, who was unarmed when police shot him 41 times in the vestibule of his Bronx apartment building, joined the New York City Fire Department. Edward McMellon and Richard Murphy were acquitted of all charges in Diallo's death and months later successfully applied to become firefighters, prompting a wave of media coverage and criticism.    Diallo's father, along with representatives from the Islamic Society of Fire Department Personnel and the Vulcan Society fraternal order of Black firefighters all condemned the hirings."If a Black man had ever murdered somebody and went to trial for murder, no matter what the circumstances, that man would not be allowed to be a firefighter," Paul Washington, then-president of the Vulcan Society, said at the time. Two Black firefighters transferred to different firehouses after McMellon was assigned to their engine company. (The FDNY denied at the time that the transfers were related to McMellon.)McMellon is still an active member of the FDNY, the department confirmed to Insider, while Murphy is retired. People gather to protest against the police killing of Tyre Nichols at Times Square in New York on January 28, 2023. Fatih Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images Meanwhile, several officers in high-profile killings complained in the following years that they became pariahs and found it difficult to restart their lives.  Darren Wilson, the officer who in 2014 shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, claimed a year after the incident that he faced death threats, was forced to move neighborhoods and was denied rejoining the police force after his acquittal. Wilson, who became a right-wing rallying point with supporters raising almost five hundred thousand dollars for him after the incident, told The New Yorker that he had quit a retail job stocking shoes after two weeks when reporters started calling the store.A similar infamy dogged one of the officers who beat and injured Rodney King. Timothy Wind, one of the officers who repeatedly struck King, was acquitted of criminal charges but fired by the LAPD. He drew protests after being hired as an unarmed community service officer in Culver City, California in 1994. Wind eventually moved to small town Indiana to avoid scrutiny, the Los Angeles Times reported in 2012, but maintained he did nothing wrong and attended law school with the intent on pursuing a career in criminal justice. The AP reported in 2021 that he had moved to Kansas. Calls placed to numbers listed under his name didn't go through or weren't answered.Other officers have retired with pensions or quietly found other careers. Michael Oliver, one of the NYPD officers involved in the fatal shooting of Sean Bell in 2006, was forced to resign but allowed to collect $40,000 in pension benefits, according to the New York Post. He later became a salesman at a New Jersey BMW dealership. In rare cases, cops involved in these killings have tried to publicly rehabilitate their image rather than seek out anonymity. At least two officers in the cases that Insider reviewed wrote books about their experiences, most recently one of the three Louisville Metro Police officers involved in the botched raid that killed 26-year-old Breonna Taylor.Jonathan Mattingly, who did not face any charges for his role in the raid, retired in 2021 and quickly wrote a tell-all book about the incident. Published through right-wing outlet The Daily Wire's imprint DW Books, Mattingly's book frames himself as a good cop unjustly vilified by "the media and the woke mob." He repeatedly blames Taylor's boyfriend Kenneth Walker, who shot and wounded Mattingly after police broke down the door while executing a warrant late at night, for provoking officers to kill Taylor. (Attorneys for Walker in his civil suit against the Louisville Department assert the book "perpetuates a lie" that their client knew it was police officers knocking down the door.) Mattingly also devotes part of the book to his past assignments in an "alpha male" street crime unit and suggests celebrities such as LeBron James and Oprah Winfrey spread lies about the raid. In one section, he claims that defense attorneys refused to take him on as a client — something he suggests was discrimination due to his "race and profession." "I guess Oprah was wrong. My whiteness didn't give me that unfair advantage or even a fair playing field. I'm simply a white guy in a WOKE world," Mattingly writes. A Republican gubernatorial candidate canceled his appearance at a fundraiser last month after learning Mattingly would also be a speaker. The cops who stayedPolice officers back their own. Even officers accused of severe misconduct often keep working as cops – including in cases where police departments shell out millions to settle civil lawsuits."There's that thin blue line where officers are not just reluctant to, but don't report on one another. It's such a pervasive problem," said Mari Newman, a civil rights attorney in Colorado who has sued police departments. "Officers don't just stick together, but cover up each other's wrongdoing." Three officers who in 2020 placed a "spit hood" over the head of Daniel Prude, then pushed his face into the ground, suffocating him to death, were working for the Rochester, New York police department as recently as last year, city records show. The city paid $12 million to Prude's family; the officers were not charged. The two officers who shot Stephon Clark seven times in his grandmother's backyard still work for the Sacramento Police Department; that city has paid more than $4 million to Clark's family. The officers were not charged.Involvement in notorious police killings hasn't stopped some officers from receiving promotions and honors.In Seattle, the two officers who killed Charleena Lyles in her apartment in front of her children in 2017 are still on the force, according to city records. Six officers charged and acquitted in the death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore in 2015 still work for the police department; one has been promoted to lieutenant. The officers who killed Lyles weren't charged. In New York City, Kenneth Boss, one of the officers who fired shots in the killing of Diallo in 1999, stayed on the force for nearly 20 more years after being acquitted of murder charges. Boss received a promotion in 2015, and one year later a New York police union named him a "Sergeant of the Year" for rescuing a couple stranded on an island in Jamaica Bay. An image of George Floyd is seen at a memorial in San Diego for Black Americans who have lost their lives due to systemic racism and racial injustice. Mario Tama/Getty Images  It can also take so long to build a criminal case against police that even officers who do get prosecuted can stay on the force for years before charges are brought. Elijah McClain, 23, died in August 2019 after three police officers in Aurora, Colorado, slammed him into a wall, held him to the ground, and put him in a chokehold. Paramedics arriving on the scene diagnosed the by-then unconscious McClain with "excited delirium" and injected him with ketamine; he suffered a heart attack on the way to the hospital. An autopsy report found the cause of death to be "complications of ketamine administration following forcible restraint."McClain, who had a blood circulation disorder that caused him to get cold easily, had been wearing a ski mask while walking through the Denver suburb. A resident called 911 to report a "sketchy" person.Initially, the officers were cleared of wrongdoing. The local district attorney, acting on information collected by the police department, declined to prosecute. The department's internal investigation was "cursory and summary at best," independent investigators later found.All three officers went back to work.One of them, Randy Roedema, was involved in another excessive force case the very next year. Another, Jason Rosenblatt, responded "ha ha" when a colleague texted him making fun of McClain's death; he was fired over that incident.Two years after McClain's death a state-appointed special investigator brought charges against the three officers. The new investigation had been spurred by massive racial justice protests in the summer of 2020."Make no mistake, we recognize that this case will be difficult to prosecute," Colorado attorney general Phil Weiser said in a news conference at the time. "These types of cases always are." Prosecutors who want to bring charges against officers who kill face a myriad of challenges. There is a standard requiring them to prove that the officer acted unreasonably, a high legal bar. Other officers in a department may stonewall attempts to gain information, and body camera footage from the incidents can be incomplete or nonexistent. Police unions can also be quick to defend their members against any punitive measures for their actions on the job. Even after the charges, the Aurora police union insisted that the officers "did nothing wrong" and that McClain's death was related to his decision to "violently resist arrest." "The hysterical overreaction to this case has severely damaged the police department," the union said in a statement issued at the time of the charges.Officers sometimes leave the department where the incident occurred, transferring townships or jurisdictions. The NYPD reassigned one of the other officers involved in the Diallo killing to a unit at a sleepy airfield in southern Brooklyn where the department conducts helicopter operations. Two of the three officers charged with murdering George Robinson in 2019 left the Jackson, Mississippi police department after Robinson's death, for the nearby city of Clinton's police department.  "We don't want anything to do with a bad cop and if I thought these guys were bad cops, we wouldn't have hired them," Clinton's police chief Ford Hayman told local news in 2020. Hayman and Clinton Mayor Phil Fisher attended the officers' arraignment for moral support. Fisher has implied the criminal charges may be politically motivated and called on the media to "spend as much time in the exoneration process as they have in the accusing process." One of the officers Clinton hired was later convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to five years in prison. Police killings have sparked widespread protest movements demanding increased accountability and an end to discriminatory policing. Jon Cherry/Getty Images In rare instances, officers are too politically toxic to keep on staff. After killing 12-year-old Tamir Rice in 2014, Cleveland police officer Timothy Loehmann has applied for at least two other policing jobs but withdrew his applications after his hiring sparked community furor. Loehmann was not charged in Rice's death, but was fired from the Cleveland police department in 2017 for lying on his employment application. Last year, Loehmann was briefly hired to be the sole cop in the tiny town of Tioga, Pennsylvania, before protest prompted the city to reverse its decision. Tioga's mayor told local news that Rice's death never came up in the interview process."I found it strange that someone would move here all the way from Cleveland, Ohio, for $18 an hour," mayor Dave Wilcox told the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "But I heard that he wanted to get away from it all and come here to hunt and fish." The cops who were convictedIn the past 18 years, 172 police have been charged with murder or manslaughter for an on-duty shooting, according to Stinson, the professor at Bowling Green State University, and 55 of them have been convicted of some crime. That data doesn't include cases that didn't involve a gun, like the killings of George Floyd or Tyre Nichols.Out of the 72 officers that Insider researched, 16 of them were convicted or pleaded guilty.Some convicted officers received long sentences, like Derek Chauvin, who killed Floyd and is set to remain in prison until 2038. Amber Guyger, the Texas officer convicted of murdering her upstairs neighbor Botham Jean after allegedly mistaking his apartment for her own, was sentenced to 10 years in prison, though she will be eligible for parole starting in September 2024.In some cases, officers found support from police unions while awaiting trial. Gescard Insora, an NYPD detective who was the first to open fire on Sean Bell in 2006, was acquitted of criminal charges but fired and reported by the New York Post in 2013 to have gotten a job with the Detectives Endowment Association. Jason Van Dyke, the Chicago cop convicted of killing Laquan McDonald, worked as a janitor for a Chicago police union while his case was pending.Van Dyke, who was released from prison in 2022, now works in construction and still lives with his family in the Chicago area, according to his lawyer Dan Herbert. "He's doing okay," Herbert said. "It took a lot out of him." Jason Van Dyke, was convicted of killing Laquan McDonald. He served less than half of his seven year sentence and was released in 2022. Brian Jackson/Sun-Times via AP Others spend little or no time behind bars. Johannes Mehserle, a transit cop who shot Oscar Grant in Oakland, California, served 11 months in prison after he was convicted of involuntary manslaughter. Peter Liang, a rookie NYPD officer who fired a round into a dark stairwell that ricocheted and killed Akai Gurley, was sentenced to five years of probation. Insider couldn't find current contact information for Mehserle and a voicemail left for his father didn't receive a response. One of Liang's lawyers agreed to pass on a reporter's contact info, but no response was received.In Memphis, some hope that the indictment of the five officers who killed Tyre Nichols proves to be a break with the past. Steve Nelson, the Shelby County district attorney, took office last year after beating prosecutor Amy Weirich, who faced allegations of prosecutorial misconduct and a track record of not charging cops, according to the Huffington Post. But the outcome of any case of officer-involved killings or police abuse always carries a level of uncertainty. Policing is fragmented across nearly 18,000 jurisdictions, said Justin Nix, a criminology professor at the University of Nebraska Omaha who has studied the effect of racial justice protests on police departments. That means 18,000 different approaches to holding officers accountable for violence."For every example of accountability, it's easy to pick an example of an officer who skirted consequences for misconduct," Nix said. .content-lock-lock .hidden { display: none; }

Memphis police due in court to issue pleas in death of Tyre Nichols | 1330 & 101.5 WHBL

By |2023-02-17T23:25:49-05:00February 17th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

By Maria Alejandra CardonaMEMPHIS, Tenn. (Reuters) – Five fired Memphis police officers are due in court on Friday to enter their pleas against second-degree murder charges stemming from the beating of Tyre Nichols, a Black man who died three days later.Police video captured images of the officers beating and kicking Nichols, hitting him with a baton, spraying him with pepper spray and firing a stun gun at him on Jan. 7 following a traffic stop, sparking outrage and renewing the national conversation about race relations and police brutality.The five officers, all out on bail, are expected to plead not guilty to charges of second-degree murder, aggravated assault, aggravated kidnapping, official misconduct and official oppression in the arraignment hearing set for 9 a.m. CST (1500 GMT) at Shelby County Criminal Court.All five officers – Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmit Martin, Desmond Mills Jr. and Justin Smith – are Black. They have been fired from the police force and the special unit they were a member of has been disbanded.A sixth, white officer has also been fired, as have three fire department emergency medical technicians who arrived after Nichols was beaten. Two Shelby County sheriff’s deputies who responded to the scene were suspended five days without pay.Nichols, 29, a father, avid skateboarder and student of photography, attempted to converse with police as they shouted orders and threatened him with violence during the ordeal.“You guys are really doing a lot right now. I’m just trying to go home,” Nichols said at one point, sitting on the street as police tried to subdue him.“Stop. I’m not doing anything,” Nichols said, just before breaking free and running.When police caught up to him, he was beaten while restrained, clubbed with a baton, and kicked while on the ground.Less than 100 yards (meters) from home, he called out for his mother several times.Officers on the video said Nichols had swerved through traffic dangerously, and one said Nichols attempted to grab his gun during the scrum.After the hearing, civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents Nichols’ family, is scheduled to address the media.Crump has represented victims’ families in some of America’s highest profile cases where African Americans have died at the hands of police. Crump helped the families of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor win multimillion-dollar settlements from the cities of Minneapolis and Louisville, respectively.(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Former KY officer’s trial date postponed in Breonna Taylor case – WFIN Local News

By |2023-02-17T23:25:50-05:00February 17th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

​ The large volume of evidence collected in the Breonna Taylor case prompted a judge on Wednesday to push back the trial date for a former Kentucky police officer who fired blindly into Taylor’s apartment during the deadly no-knock raid on her apartment in 2020. The trial will mark a second attempt by prosecutors to convict Brett Hankison for his actions on the night Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, was shot to death by police in Louisville. Taylor, who worked as an emergency medical technician, was shot multiple times during the raid. The warrant for the raid was later found to be flawed. U.S. District Judge Rebecca Grady Jennings moved the trial back about two months to Oct. 30, after Hankison’s lawyers asked for more time to process massive amounts of evidence turned over by federal prosecutors. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT CHARGES 4 LOUISVILLE POLICE OFFICERS IN BREONNA TAYLOR INVESTIGATION Hankison was indicted by the U.S. Justice Department last year along with three other officers, one of whom has pleaded guilty to helping falsify the warrant used to enter Taylor’s apartment on March 13, 2020. Taylor was killed in her hallway after officers broke down the door and Taylor’s boyfriend fired a shot that struck a police sergeant. None of Hankison’s shots hit Taylor. Her killing along with George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minnesota police in 2020 ignited protests that summer around the country over racial injustice. U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland announced the federal indictments in the Taylor case in August, remarking that Taylor “should be alive today.” Hankison is the only officer who fired shots during the raid who has been charged in any court. Prosecutors determined that two other officers who fired and struck Taylor were justified in shooting back after Taylor’s boyfriend fired at them. Hankison attorney Jack Byrd also told Jennings Wednesday that his team needs time to meet with use-of-force and crime scene experts to go over evidence. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Hankison, 46, was acquitted in March of charges brought by state prosecutors for endangering Taylor’s next-door neighbors with shots he fired into Taylor’s apartment that went through her walls. Hankison retreated from the open doorway and fired 10 bullets into a sliding door and window on the side of Taylor’s apartment. The more recent federal charges accuse him of endangering neighbors along with Taylor and her boyfriend. Another former officer, Kelly Goodlett, has pleaded guilty to a federal conspiracy charge, and is expected to testify in the cases against two more officers who were involved in crafting the Taylor warrant. Former detective Joshua Jaynes and former Sgt. Kyle Meany are charged with conspiring to deprive Taylor of her civil rights. Jaynes and Meany are set to be tried together on Oct. 25. Goodlett’s guilty plea was moved from last year to Dec. 13, presumably after Jaynes and Meany’s cases are finished.   

Q&A with new Louisville Metro Council District 6 member Phillip Baker – Courier-Journal

By |2023-02-16T21:23:45-05:00February 16th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

The life of one of the newest Louisville Metro Council members, as he puts it, has "always been about competition."Whether competing on the wrestling mat and gridiron, serving as a law office "runner" and then also running for political office, or working to ensure students in Louisville have their basic needs met, Phillip Baker is often on the move.His latest endeavor is serving on Metro Council as the recently appointed member for District 6, which covers part of downtown and surrounding neighborhoods such as Limerick, Old Louisville, Park Hill, Shelby Park, Smoketown and Russell.Sitting members of Louisville's legislative body picked Baker earlier in February to serve out the rest of David James' term, after the ex-Metro Council president joined Mayor Craig Greenberg's administration.As Baker gets settled into the new role, he spoke with The Courier Journal about his family, background and priorities while in office. Some answers have been edited for length and clarity.The other new Metro Council member:A teacher and mentor to Louisville kidsWhat was your childhood like? It sounds like service to the community is a theme in your family.Baker: "I'm from Winchester, Kentucky, and grew up there until 9th grade. I'm the grandson of the Rev. Henry Edward Baker, one of the first Kentucky Human Rights Commission Civil Rights Hall of Fame inductees. My father is a local pastor here at Christ Way Missionary Baptist Church. My mom is a lawyer. My sister, Dr. Jeronda Majors, will be the principal of the new West End middle school and has been the principal of Knight Middle School. My sister and brother were arrested during the Breonna Taylor protests. I went to Central High School. I took second in state in wrestling and played football. I went to Tennessee State University and played center (on the football team). I earned a degree in communication. Today, my wife and I have three kids, all boys — Phillip Jr., 13, Preston Henry Edward, 9, and Peyton Lee, 4. My wife, Tiffiny, is a teacher at Mill Creek Elementary School. We live in Old Louisville.In high school, I was a 'runner' for Wyatt Tarrant and Combs. I later got my insurance license and am a multiple line agent for State Farm. I thought I would never be like my dad, but he is also a State Farm agent (laughs)."Background:Louisville Metro Council picks 2 JCPS employees to fill its vacant seatsWhy did you seek this Metro Council seat?Baker: "My passion is to serve. That's all we knew. I'm a Family Resource Coordinator for Jefferson County Public Schools (at Coleridge-Taylor Montessori Elementary). My FRC position is everything I want to do. I'm feeding people. We're getting kids on buses, meeting parents, knocking on doors for truancies. I'm able to speak to someone if, for example, this person has an LG&E issue, helping them if they ask, 'How does LIHEAP work?' (Baker, among other positions, also serves on the Kentucky Derby Festival Board.)My first campaign was for (Kentucky House) District 41 in 2016 against Tom Riner and Attica Scott. (Scott won.) I ran for House District 43 in 2018. (Charles Booker won that Democratic primary and general election.) We started the Greater Louisville Association of Democrats to support Black political participation.I run to fulfill that need for service. I also coach in the Louisville Youth Football League with the Shively Seminoles."What are your top few priorities to tackle while in office?Baker: "Where I live has shaped my priorities. Public safety is key, but a true passion of mine is improving the health and wellness of seniors and youth. If you go down Fourth Street, you have Treyton Oaks, Puritan, Hillebrand House ... when you go in to visit these seniors ... we need to do better. The facilities, the upkeep, making sure they have dignity. They deserve it.Improving parks, like Ben Washer Park at Fifth and Kentucky streets. I want interconnectivity with other districts, like the neighboring 3rd District and the parks there. I want to make sure we are connecting residents and providing a level of customer service."Kentucky coal mining:Did mining play a role in 2022 Kentucky flood deaths? Group wants feds to investigateWill you run again in November and in 2024?Baker: "Absolutely. I'm going to seek the Democratic nomination. I have every intention of running. On the 2024 ballot, you will see Phillip Thomas Baker, unless something drastic happens."What do you and your family like to do together?Baker: "We love sporting events, basketball, football, soccer. We're always at a local game. We love the outdoors, maybe a byproduct of the pandemic. You'll see my big old butt hiking or kayaking at Tioga Falls or Beckley Creek Park. We go to church together. We're always serving and giving food out."Reach Billy Kobin at [email protected]

WKYT Investigates | Diagnosis & denial: Guardmembers, first responders with PTSD face …

By |2023-02-16T21:23:47-05:00February 16th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) - It was always his desire to serve.“I feel like God calls certain people to do certain things,” he said. “That was my calling.”He signed with the Kentucky Army National Guard as a teenager. He was once even named “Soldier of the Year.”But he never imagined that fulfilling his dream would end in a nightmare - with a discharge, post-traumatic stress disorder diagnosis and multiple denials when he applied for help, exposing the numerous obstacles - on multiple fronts - that continue to block benefits for first responders and other service members in their own times of need.His journey exemplifies a battle for benefits that can be particularly fraught for Guard members, who, in their dual mission for federal government and state government, can find themselves in a gray area between the two, with help coming from neither.“At one point, I had it made,” he told WKYT’s Garrett Wymer, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the stigma that still surrounds PTSD and because he fears the diagnosis could hinder future opportunities. “Now I struggle to even speak.”RELATED COVERAGE:For two years now the former soldier - who will go by “Jason” for the purposes of this story - has been trying to build back a life that nearly crumbled to pieces.Jason was one of 500 National Guard members ordered by Gov. Andy Beshear to assist the Louisville Metro Police Department in September 2020, as the city braced for more unrest following Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s announcement that no officers would be charged in the death of Breonna Taylor. (One officer was charged with wanton endangerment in connection with the raid. The handling of the case before a grand jury has come under scrutiny.)“I’d say within a few months of being there,” Jason said of his service on the streets of Louisville, “it’s all I thought about.”Jason says he screened positive for PTSD at a periodic health assessment (PHA) the following January - a result he says he was not aware of at the time.But his symptoms began to worsen, and he started acting out of character, leaving him unable to continue running his own business or to keep employment elsewhere, he said. His wife filed for divorce, but did not go through with it.Jason was initially diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but in a follow-up visit with Behavioral Health was then diagnosed with PTSD, he said.By the time he received the PTSD diagnosis, he said he was relieved at least to have an answer. But when he tried to access the benefits he believed he was owed, the letters in return brought denial after denial from workers’ compensation, the V.A. and Social Security Disability.According to denial letters reviewed by WKYT Investigates:SSDI determined the effects of PTSD were “not severe enough to keep [him] from working.”Jason was denied by the V.A. and V.A. healthcare because the National Guard was on state active duty orders instead of federal active duty orders.And he is not eligible for workers’ compensation because Kentucky state law requires a “psychological, psychiatric or stress-related change” to be a “direct result of a physical injury” in order for it to be covered.Advocates see the workers’ compensation law as containing an outdated definition or inadequate understanding of the full scope and severity of the problem - a flaw in state statute that continues to allow a growing number of first responders and service members to fall through the cracks, as WKYT’s Garrett Wymer first reported last year in an in-depth look at the obstacles blocking benefits for first responders and the difficulty of proving a PTSD diagnosis.“That’s a huge slap in the face for our community,” said Jeremy Harrell, founder and CEO of Veteran’s Club Inc. “They’re serving honorably - in our home state. And if the federal government won’t take care of them, then I think Kentucky needs to.”Harrell’s Louisville-based non-profit offers services and programs to help those who wore the uniform. They work directly with 7,000 veterans around the region.Harrell knows the impact PTSD can have. Accessing benefits, he said, should not be that hard.“It needs to be addressed,” he said. “We have to take care of the people who take care of us. You can’t ask people to go into harm’s way and just disregard the needs that they have once they complete that.”State lawmakers have it in their power to fix part of the problem, yet to this point they have largely remained silent.House Bill 219, filed last week in the General Assembly, would make first responders, frontline staff and National Guard members on state active duty eligible for workers’ compensation if diagnosed with PTSD, even without a physical injury.Language in the newly-filed bill, sponsored by Rep. Rebecca Raymer, R-Morgantown, has been the focal point of a growing grassroots effort to lobby for change. Family members of first responders diagnosed with PTSD - including the Treadways, featured in the WKYT Investigates report on the issue from March 2022 - have contacted legislator after legislator looking for lawmakers willing to support the legislation.[Follow the bill’s progress here.]However, a similar bill filed last year - House Bill 356, which did not include National Guard members like Jason - went nowhere. It was never even assigned to a committee.Advocates have vowed to push lawmakers to act, saying politicians need to ‘walk the walk.’“We can’t just talk about it at a big round table or in front of an audience,” Harrell said. “We must put in place the proper rules and policy changes that help the people.”As for Jason, his desire to serve remains strong.“The hardest thing about being in the National Guard is taking that uniform off and coming back home,” he said.As his struggle has become more known in his community, he says other soldiers have opened up to him about going through struggles themselves.“They talk to me,” he said. “Some of them have been through absolute hell. And there’s no help for them.”It is one reason he hopes to be a voice for change, even as he tries to figure out his own future.“What’s next for me?” he asked. “I don’t know. I don’t know.”Copyright 2023 WKYT. All rights reserved.

A major Breonna Taylor update as former Kentucky police officer Brett Hankison … – Techno Trenz

By |2023-02-16T21:23:50-05:00February 16th, 2023|Breonna Taylor|

Ads An ex-Kentucky police officer who fired into Breonna Taylor’s apartment blindly on the night of the deadly raid in 2020 will once more face prosecution by prosecutors. Brett Hankison, a fired Louisville police officer who was arrested in August of last year on federal charges, now has a trial date of August 21. Continue checking Sun Online for updates on this story. The-sun.com is your go-to source for the most up-to-date celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos. Follow us from our primary Twitter account at www.twitter.com/TheSunUS and like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/TheSunUS.@TheUSSun. Ads

Go to Top