StMU Research Scholars

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A loud bang on the door ripped it off the hinges, waking Breonna Taylor and Kenneth Walker, in shock, suspecting a break in, Mr. Walker armed

Protests sparked by Breonna Taylor's death
Protests sparked by Breonna Taylor’s death | Courtesy of Instagram

with his licensed gun, jumps to the living room alongside Ms. Taylor. Mr. Walker fired a warning shot, when facing several armed persons, the bullet hit one of the intruders. Within a split second the plain clothed officers fired a barrage of over 20 bullets, among which at least 8 struck Ms. Taylor.1 Breonna Taylor, an Emergency room technician in Jacksonville, laid in her apartment gargling blood and gasping for air, none of the officers provided her any medical assistance. Excessive use of force by law enforcement agents and disregard for the lethal consequences, adds to the growing pattern of cases of human rights violations by Law Enforcement Agents in the United States. This is the everyday reality for Black and brown people across the United States of America. The Black Lives Matter campaign continues to fight the mounting death toll of Black People. Along with George Floyd, the Breonna Taylor case leaves no uncertainty in the level of violations and disregard for Black lives. How could the police go to a wrong address and force their way in? And leave an injured bystander to die without any assistance. Taylor was legitimately in her home where her boyfriend had the right to defend them with his licensed handgun. Once injured, the minimum responsibility of the police was to render aid to Taylor until EMS arrived on the scene. Instead she died from police indifference.

Citizens demand police reform | Courtesy of Instagram

Police records convey Taylor was not the main target of the police investigation the night she was killed by a rain of bullets. Rather the focus was on Jamarcus Glover, Taylor’s ex-boyfriend. The two had maintained a “passive” relationship according to Taylor’s family. Detective Joshua Jaynes prepared an affidavit to obtain a search warrant for Taylor’s home in which he wrote, in January he saw Glover leave her apartment with a package from USPS prior to driving to a “known drug house” more than ten miles away. In addition, Detective Jaynes wrote he verified Glover was receiving packages at Taylor’s apartment “through a US Postal Inspector.” Subsequently, a judge signed off on the warrant, including a “no knock” provision which permitted officers to enter Taylor’s home without identifying themselves.2 Postal inspector Tony Gooden told WDRB News, that in January a different agency had asked his office to look into whether Taylor’s apartment was receiving any suspicious mail. After complying with the request, his office determined there was no suspicious mail. Gooden said, “There’s no packages of interest going there,” in an interview with WDRB News.3 Gooden’s disclosure raises concerns about the Louisville police department’s justification for a warrant which was granted based on misleading information provided in the affidavit. The day prior to the raid, the detective asked the judge for the warrant partly claiming a postal inspector verified that Glover was receiving suspicious packages at Taylor’s address.4

Tamika Palmer
Breonna Taylor’s mother, Tamika Palmer, at Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s Louisville office leading a rally | Courtesy of Instagram

The attorney representing Taylor’s family said “This revelation validates what we already knew: This young woman was brutally and unjustifiably killed by Louisville police, who supplied false information on the warrant they used to enter her home unannounced. Gooden further stated that ‘no packages of interest were going there.’ We will continue to demand transparency from the Louisville police on behalf of Breonna’s family.”5 The police raid found no drugs or cash at her apartment. In fact, that same night, the suspect the police were looking for had been taken into custody from a location across town.6 Lackadaisical surveillance failed to reveal Mr. Walker was spending the night in the appartment, thus the officers expected to find an unarmed woman alone.7 Choosing not to follow their own rules of engagement, along with failure to comply with routine safety procedures, such as making sure an ambulance is stationed outside of any major raid operation, cost an innocent woman her life. Her Name is Breonna Taylor. If many of these details are uncontested then why is it still so hard to get some accountability?

 

The Say Her Name campaign has had major influence
Young NBA superstar Donovan Mitchell choosing to use the message Say Her Name on his jersey to spread awareness | Courtesy of Instagram

The Taylor family, along with athletes, celebrities, and ordinary citizens took their protests to the streets to call for justice. The National Basketball Association, under pressure from their players, began allowing justice slogans to replace names on jerseys. In fact, after the restart of the NBA season, the 2019-2020 season focused on using the NBA platform to shed light on social justice issues brought to the forefront by the Black Lives Matter movement and the Say Her Name campaign.8 Overnight many of the jersey backs stated “SAY HER NAME”. Millions of people use social media and the #sayhername to spread awareness about the needless killing of Breonna Taylor and so many other victims at the hands of police officers. The #SayHerName campaign was created in December 2014  by the African American Policy Forum (AAPF) and the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies (CISPS). The goal of the campaign is to include women in the national conversation about race and policing and bring awareness to the invisible names and stories of black women and girls who have been victimized by prejudice police.  Women who have been gratuitously killed, like Breonna Taylor, are mentioned by name in relation to the Black Lives Matter campaign. However, other women: Michelle Cusseaux, Kayla Moore, Tanisha Anderson, Sandra Blend, and Atatiana Jefferson purposefully naming them, are often left out of the the lists of names. The United States has often boasted its status as a leader in protecting human rights, but many minority groups on the receiving end of discrimination and police brutality do not feel that way. “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” provide the fundamental pillars of this country’s support for human rights. However, for citizens of color this is merely a facade for a country that continues to disenfranchise and brutally kill minorities in disproportionate numbers. African Americans account for less than 13 percent of the United States population, yet they are killed by police at more than twice the rate of White Americans.9 These incidents of human rights violations have not gone unnoticed by the international community. International concern grew following George Floyd’s death, the UN Human Rights Council convened to adopt without a vote resolution 43/1. The resolution is aimed at protecting the fundamental freedoms and human rights of African people against excessive use and human rights violations by law enforcement.10

Players of the Women’s National Basketball League in solitude for justice | Courtesy of Instagram

Despite the great national efforts of many, on September 3rd, 2020, Kentucky Attorney General, Daniel Cameron reported two of the three officers, Jonathan Mattingly and Myles Cosgrove, were not charged with any wrong doing by the grand jury. No longer an officer, Brett Hankison was charged with three counts of first degree wanton endangerment for firing bullets that entered a neighboring apartment, to which he pleaded not guilty. No officer was charged for causing Breonna Taylor’s death. This is because police officers, like ordinary citizens, have the right to defend themselves. Since Kenneth Walker fired the first shot, the police officers have claimed they fired back in self defense. However, if an ordinary citizen were to break into another person’s home with a battering ram at 1a.m., the citizen would be considered the aggressor. Thus, the citizen would have no right to a self defense claim. Since the police officers had obtained a warrant, even one based on false premises, it prevents from legally defining them as aggressors.11 The city of Louisville announced a 12 million dollar settlement along with changes in policing following a wrongful-death lawsuit filed by the Taylor family. Despite the case coming to a close, the FBI’s Civil Rights Division continues to further investigate “all aspects” of Taylor’s death.12

Kentucky Attorney General, Daniel Cameron, has been under extreme scrutiny. Released evidence has raised questions about the evidence Cameron’s office used in its presentation to the grand jury. The NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund has declared Cameron’s presentation to the Breonna Taylor grand jury showed an “inappropriate bias” for the police officers who fatally killed her. The NAACP report states Cameron’s office did not present evidence that could have incriminated officers, disputed the validity of the search warrant, and left no doubt to the grand jury to consider homicide charges.13 In addition, an anonymous juror revealed Cameron had distorted the jury’s case to the public and that the jurors were never given the option to indict officers Mattingly and Cosgrove.14 Despite these new revelations, it is difficult to say whether they will have made a difference in the outcome of the case. However, what remains is that an innocent black women was shot and killed due to irresponsible policing and still no accountability for her death. Black people across America are truly afraid of the police, who are supposed to protect them, because of countless cases like these that make their nightmare all too real. Until the policing institutions unite to change how Black and Brown citizens are treated, and follow proven effective actions, policing will reproduce the racial discriminatory system that costs unnecessary lives at the hands poorly trained law enforcement without any accountability.

  1. The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights to William P. Barr, June 4, 2020, in The Leadership Conference, http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/policy/letters/2020/Breonna_Taylor_FINAL_6_4_2020.pdf.
  2. Bridget Read, “What We Know About the killing of Breonna Taylor,” September 29, 2020, The Cut, https://www.thecut.com/2020/09/breonna-taylor-louisville-shooting-police-what-we-know.html.
  3. Jason Riley, Marcus Green, Travis Ragsdale, “Louisville postal inspector: No ‘packages of interest’ at slain EMT Breonna Taylor’s home,” September 29, 2020, WDRB News, https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/louisville-postal-inspector-no-packages-of-interest-at-slain-emt-breonna-taylor-s-home/article_f25bbc06-96e4-11ea-9371-97b341bd2866.html.
  4. Jason Riley, Marcus Green, Travis Ragsdale, “Louisville postal inspector: No ‘packages of interest’ at slain EMT Breonna Taylor’s home,” September 29, 2020, WDRB News, https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/louisville-postal-inspector-no-packages-of-interest-at-slain-emt-breonna-taylor-s-home/article_f25bbc06-96e4-11ea-9371-97b341bd2866.html.
  5. “Attorney for Breonna Taylor releases statement about ‘no-knock’ warrant used to access home,” May 16, 2020, WLKY News, https://www.wlky.com/article/attorney-for-breonna-taylor-releases-statement-about-no-knock-warrant-used-to-access-home/32514685.
  6. Amina Elahi, “No Arrests Or Charges So Far In Breonna Taylor’s Shooting Death,” July 13, 2020, National Public Radio, https://www.npr.org/2020/07/13/890328388/no-arrests-or-charges-so-far-in-breonna-taylors-shooting-death.
  7. Rukmini Callimachi, “Breonna Taylor’s Life Was Changing. Then the Police Came to Her Door,” August 30, 2020, The New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/30/us/breonna-taylor-police-killing.html.
  8. NBA media reports, “NBA, NBAPA reportedly approved social justice messages on jerseys,” July 3, 2020, NBA, https://www.nba.com/article/2020/07/03/nba-union-approve-social-justice-messages-jerseys.
  9. The Washington Post, “1,003 people have been shot and killed by police in the past year,” October 20, 2020, The Washington Post, Police shootings database 2015-2020 – Washington Post.
  10. “43rd session of the Human Rights Council: Resolutions, decisions and President’s statements,” United Nations Human Rights Council, accessed October 31, 2020. https://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/RegularSessions/Session43/Pages/ResDecStat.aspx.
  11. “Legal Analysis Of An Indictment in The Breonna Taylor Case,” September 24, 2020, NPR, https://www.npr.org/2020/09/24/916625332/legal-analysis-of-an-indictment-in-the-breonna-taylor-case.
  12. Matt Mencarini, “FBI investigation into Breonna Taylor case continues even after grand jury indict officer,” September 23, 2020, Courier Journal, https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/breonna-taylor/2020/09/23/fbi-investigation-into-breonna-taylor-case-still-open-after-indictment/5865796002/.
  13. Darcy Costello, “NAACP: AG Daniel Cameron showed ‘inappropriate bias’ toward police in Breonna Taylor case,” November 30, 2020, Courier Journal, https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/breonna-taylor/2020/11/30/naacp-kentucky-ag-showed-inappropriate-bias-breonna-taylor-case/6464938002/.
  14. Zak Cheney-Rice, “It Sure Looks like Daniel Cameron Lied About Breonna Taylor’s Killing,” September 30, 2020, NY Mag, https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/09/daniel-cameron-lied-about-grand-jury-louisville-police-breonna-taylor.html.

Recent Comments

28 comments

  • Alvaro Garza

    I saw a video recently of a man chanting “Breonna Taylor was a thug and a criminal”. It’s insane that in 2021 there are still people who think and act this way. The story of Breonna Taylor is very disheartening and some of the reactions from people is even more uncomfortable to witness. I think you did a very well job summarizing the events that occurred on the day of the attack as well as discussing the events that followed.

  • Faith Chapman

    Reading this article raised several questions from me. If Walker was the one who shot, why was he not killed but Taylor was? If it’s because they didn’t want to kill, or they realized they had the wrong guy (that Walker was not their target or that Taylor hadn’t shot), then Taylor should have been helped. Why do judges even allow police officers to break into people’s homes, especially people of non-interests’, unannounced? Was it just unfathomable for the police to fail surveillance so badly that the judge thought their judgement could be trusted? Isn’t it a bit disturbing that they acted on the expectation that they would face an “unarmed woman alone?” If three officers were present, doesn’t that mean that each officer on average shot at least 6 bullets, is that not excessive, especially to assess the situation? If more than that were present, why were they so heavily armed if they expected to face an “unarmed woman alone?” Lastly, how did one of the officers get charged for potentially endangering a neighboring family but not for actually endangering the couple that they were shooting at, actually managing to kill one, either for shooting her in the first place or neglecting to save her life when it’s their job? If none of them got charged for murder, two of which seemingly still police officers after the incident, then the one that did get charged may as well be justified for having the gall to plead “not guilty” to the lesser crime.

    On a side note (and I’m not faulting anyone here) I feel like the second image in this article is a little distasteful. I don’t know, it just rubs me the wrong way.

  • Paul Garza

    It truly is sad that articles like this have to be written because the police murder another black woman and receive a slap on the wrist. This article is very informational and sheds more light on a dark truth behind policing, excessive force, and racism in this country. I like that this article really gives insight to the before, during, and after of the murder of Breanna Taylor. It shows the mistakes of the police and why it is unacceptable to let actions like this slide. This article was well researched and written to bring some justice to Breonna Taylor and others who have died due to recklessness of the police.

  • Camryn Blackmon

    Hi Shriji,
    Your article is so important. You were able to incorporate the emotional and informative elements into the timeline of events that occurred with Breonna Taylor’s case. I feel like having an article like yours that can objectively list the events is important. Many people tried to spread different information to justify the police’s actions the night they killed Breonna Taylor. I think you also described and captured the aftermath and action across the United States really well.

  • Julia Aleman

    I think the emotion of this writing really brought everything together. It is the great balance of descriptiveness, emotion and imagery that really got me to keep reading. The timeline of this was well thought out and the research was nicely done. I really enjoyed reading the little details that went into this and how big of and effect that this brought onto the community .

  • Sara Alvirde

    It is appalling to know how long it took for the police enforcement and government to acknowledge the death of Breonna Taylor and her husband. I can’t believe I have heard barely any new progress on the arrest of the police accountable for this murder or any justice to the family of Breonna when it was taken last year for any news updates. This tragic story really shows you how broken the authority system is in America. It also shows you how much a community can strongly and bravely unite to bring justice as this is not the first time the Black Community has been mistreated.

  • Linae Totten

    Hello Shriji! This story breaks my heart everytime I come across it. The actions of the officers involved were careless. Somehow they were carried out like a regular day’s work. It was disturbing how seamless their misconduct went unchallenged up until Ms. Taylor’s shooting death. I appreciate that you highlighted the happenings within the grand jury. Jurors only confirmed what most already believed about the decisions AG Daniel Cameron made when deciding how to charge the case. In today’s society, one would think that people in positions of authority and service would carry out their duties with the utmost integrity.

  • Soleil Armijo

    This article is so relevant to the issues that are in the front line to US citizens right now. Your writing was passionate yet well thought out. It is unacceptable the treatment of brown and black people and the Black Lives Matter movement is long overdue. The unity and support seen by protestors is inspiring and makes me emotional. You did an excellent job of researching and presenting a blend of emotion and truth.

  • Andrea Salas

    This article speaks speaks about about an issue that is very difficult to speak about, and shows us that we need to talk about these difficult topics. Reading this article made informed me about how the situation went down and how things could have gone way differently if the police would have acted fairly. She was unjustifiably killed due to false information that the police had, which shows how they need to be held accountable. It’s sad to say that this is just one from many people who have been unjustifiably killed. I am very glad you chose to write about this topic, because it helps educate people, including myself, about these situations and how change needs to be done.

  • Ariel Howell

    I like how you told all of the facts about Breonna Taylor and you were very detailed about the information. You could conclude with steps the reader can take to stay educated, aware and in a position of advocacy in the prevention of future situations.Just by readings gives chilles about the situation.

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