4 Current, Former Louisville KY Cops Face Federal Charges Over Breonna Taylor’s Death

Editor’s note

These indict­ments have kin­dled some hope in me for the Merrick Garland Justice Department, and at the same time, it should shine a light on some­thing that I have said repeat­ed­ly, local pros­e­cu­tors and attor­ney gen­er­als can­not be trust­ed to do the right thing when it comes to inves­ti­gat­ing and pros­e­cut­ing police crimes. That includes Black prosecutors.
Far too often, we see pros­e­cu­tors who work close­ly with cops local­ly, or are afraid of police unions becom­ing the lag­ging edge rather than the lead­ing edge in crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tions of crim­i­nal cops.
The fact there is a fed­er­al indict­ment of these offi­cers demon­strates once again that this prac­tice of allow­ing local­ly taint­ed pros­e­cu­tors and attor­ney gen­er­als to be the final arbiters of whether crim­i­nal charges are war­rant­ed goes against the grain of com­mon sense.
It also demon­strates to Black folks that black-skinned folks are not always kin-folks.

Here we have a black-skinned folk, in actu­al­i­ty a coon, refus­ing to fol­low the law because he is a Trump stoolie, he is a dis­grace who should be boot­ed from office.(mb)

https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​t​u​r​n​s​-​o​u​t​-​t​h​e​-​g​r​a​n​d​-​j​u​r​y​-​h​e​a​r​d​-​n​o​-​e​v​i​d​e​n​c​e​-​o​n​-​w​h​i​c​h​-​t​o​-​c​o​n​s​i​d​e​r​-​c​h​a​r​g​i​n​g​-​c​o​p​s​-​i​n​-​b​r​e​o​n​n​a​-​t​a​y​l​o​r​s​-​c​a​se/

Here is the Attorney General of the state, Daniel Cameron whose grand jury was not pre­sent­ed with evi­dence to war­rant a charge of these very same offi­cers. Guess why?

Four cur­rent and for­mer Louisville police offi­cers have been arrest­ed for their roles in a botched search war­rant that was exe­cut­ed at the home of Breonna Taylor and result­ed in her death. Kelly Goodlett, Joshua Jaynes, Kyle Meany, and Brett Hankison face fed­er­al charges, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Thursday morn­ing. The offi­cers were charged with civ­il rights offens­es, uncon­sti­tu­tion­al use of force, obstruc­tion, and con­spir­a­cy, Garland said. Garland said he spoke with Taylor’s fam­i­ly to noti­fy them of the arrests.

I share but can­not imag­ine the grief of the fam­i­ly and loved ones of Breonna Taylor from events that result­ed in her death … Breonna Taylor should be alive today,” Garland said. Ben Crump, an attor­ney who spe­cial­izes in civ­il rights and has rep­re­sent­ed Taylor’s fam­i­ly, com­mend­ed the announce­ment of the charges.

This day is about (Taylor’s moth­er Tamika Palmer), her fam­i­ly,” Crump said. “It’s about Breonna, and all the oth­er Breonnas across America. The Black women who have been denied jus­tice through­out the his­to­ry of this coun­try when they have been abused, assault­ed, mur­dered, raped, and dis­re­gard­ed. “Because of Breonna Taylor, we can say this is a day that Black women saw equal jus­tice in the United States of America.” A court record filed Thursday indi­cates Goodlett was charged with con­spir­a­cy. Conspiracy charges against Jaynes, anoth­er for­mer detec­tive, were also men­tioned in the court record. He was fired from the posi­tion in 2021

According to court doc­u­ments, both Goodlett and Jaynes know­ing­ly fal­si­fied an affi­davit to get a search war­rant for Breonna Taylor’s home where she was killed when police exe­cut­ing the search war­rant fired 32 total shots. Officers fired after Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired at them with a legal­ly-owned gun because he thought they were intrud­ers break­ing into Taylor’s apart­ment. The court record alleges that both Goodlett and Jaynes put false and mis­lead­ing infor­ma­tion in the affi­davit in order to get the war­rant. The war­rant was one of five obtained by inves­ti­ga­tors who were look­ing into poten­tial drug traf­fick­ing in Louisville, accord­ing to the Department of Justice. The pri­ma­ry tar­get of the inves­ti­ga­tion was Jamarcus Glover, a man who had been pre­vi­ous­ly arrest­ed for com­mit­ting drug offenses

Police doc­u­ments that alleged Taylor was con­nect­ed to drug crimes of her ex-boyfriend, Glover, were obtained by media out­lets. In the doc­u­ments, police out­lined their case for exe­cut­ing a no-knock war­rant at Taylor’s apart­ment, cit­ing jail­house phone calls and oth­er sur­veil­lance tying her to Glover and sus­pect­ed drug activ­i­ty. Glover indi­cat­ed in record­ed jail calls that Taylor was hold­ing mon­ey for him, but he said in a lat­er call from the jail that he didn’t under­stand why police would search her apart­ment. He said the only thing tying him to her house was “bonds,” an appar­ent ref­er­ence to pri­or bond pay­ments made for him by Taylor, accord­ing to the Courier-Journal. In an inter­view with the Courier-Journal, Glover said that the infor­ma­tion police used to tie Taylor to the drug activ­i­ty was mis­lead­ing and incorrect

The offi­cers who car­ried out the war­rant at Taylor’s home were not aware the infor­ma­tion had been fal­si­fied, accord­ing to the Department of Justice. Officials from the Department of Justice said Thursday that Goodlett and Jaynes alleged­ly con­spired to cov­er up the fact that they’d use false and mis­lead­ing infor­ma­tion to get the war­rant. In nar­ra­tives list­ed in court records, around March 10 or 11, 2020, Jaynes sent Goodlett a draft of the affi­davit which claimed he ver­i­fied from a postal inspec­tor that illic­it pack­ages were being received at Taylor’s address. Court records allege that Goodlett knew the claim was false. “Despite know­ing that this alle­ga­tion was false, (Goodlett) failed to change the state­ment or object to it,” court records state. After Taylor’s death, Goodlett and Jaynes alleged­ly called, texted and met with each oth­er to dis­cuss the false infor­ma­tion and coör­di­nate a cov­er sto­ry, accord­ing to court records. The two met in a garage on the evening of May 17 and stat­ed they need­ed to “get on the same page because they could both go down for putting false infor­ma­tion in the Springfield Drive war­rant affi­davit.” After an inves­ti­ga­tion at the state lev­el, Hankison was pre­vi­ous­ly the only offi­cer charged over the shoot­ing. He was found not guilty on wan­ton endan­ger­ment charges. Garland said Thursday the Justice Department brings charges “when we believe sub­stan­tial fed­er­al inter­ests have not been vin­di­cat­ed and need to be vin­di­cat­ed.” Hankison and Jaynes had pre­vi­ous­ly been fired from the depart­ment pri­or to Thursday’s announce­ment. The Justice Department said the Louisville Metro Police Department is still under a fed­er­al civ­il inves­ti­ga­tion sep­a­rate from the charges announced Thursday.(From the Herald Leader)