Cop Who Murdered Breonna Taylor Hired .…..as A Cop/​no Joke…

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They real­ly do not care what you think, they are going to do. what they feel like doing, to hell with you and your protest.

By Dylan Lovan

A Louisville police offi­cer who fired the fatal shot that killed Breonna Taylor has a new job in law enforce­ment in a coun­ty north­east of the city.
The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office on Saturday con­firmed the hir­ing of Myles Cosgrove, who was fired from the Louisville Metro Police Department in January 2021 for vio­lat­ing use-of-force pro­ce­dures and fail­ing to use a body cam­era dur­ing the raid on Taylor’s apart­ment, WHAS-TV reported. 

Cosgrove

About a dozen peo­ple showed up in down­town Carrolton Monday morn­ing to protest his hir­ing, hold­ing signs and chant­i­ng, “Cosgrove has got to go.” “I think he should be in jail,” said Haley Wilson, a 24-year-old res­i­dent of the small Kentucky town near the Ohio River.
Investigators said that Cosgrove fired 16 rounds into the apart­ment after Taylor’s front door was breached dur­ing a nar­cotics raid on March 13, 2020. Thinking an intrud­er was break­ing in, Taylor’s boyfriend fired a shot from a hand­gun at the offi­cers. Officer Jonathan Mattingly was struck in the leg, and the offi­cers returned fire, killing Taylor in her hallway.

An FBI inves­ti­ga­tion deter­mined that Cosgrove and Mattingly struck Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman and that Cosgrove like­ly fired the fatal shot. Neither offi­cer was charged by a 2020 state grand jury in Taylor’s death, and a two-year inves­ti­ga­tion by the FBI also cleared Cosgrove and Mattingly of any charges.

The FBI probe found that oth­er supe­ri­or offi­cers had craft­ed a faulty drug war­rant that con­tained false infor­ma­tion about Taylor. U.S. Attorney Merrick Garland said in August that the offi­cers who went to Taylor’s apart­ment with the war­rant “were not involved in draft­ing the war­rant affi­davit and were not aware that it was false.”

Robert Miller, chief deputy in Carroll County, point­ed out that Cosgrove was cleared by the state grand jury when speak­ing of his hir­ing at the small Kentucky sher­if­f’s department.

In November, the Kentucky Law Enforcement Council vot­ed not to revoke Cosgrove’s state peace offi­cer cer­ti­fi­ca­tion. That meant he could apply for oth­er law enforce­ment jobs in the state.

Brett Hankison, an offi­cer who fired shots but did­n’t hit any­body dur­ing the raid, was found not guilty by a jury of wan­ton endan­ger­ment charges. But he still awaits tri­al on fed­er­al civ­il rights charges for his actions dur­ing the raid, as do two oth­er offi­cers who were involved in obtain­ing the war­rant. A third offi­cer plead­ed guilty to con­spir­a­cy in the craft­ing of the warrant.

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