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Louisville officers who killed Breonna Taylor should not have fired, investigator finds

Louisville officers who killed Breonna Taylor should not have fired, investigator finds
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Louisville Cops Shouldn't Have Fired into Breonna Taylor's Home: Internal Report


*An internal probe into the death of
Breonna Taylor that was conducted by two investigators determined that the three Louisville Metro Police Department officers involved, should not have fired shots into her apartment on March 13, 2020.
ABC News obtained documents that said Sgt. Andrew Meyer from the department’s Professional Standards Unit determined that the three officers should have held their fire after Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired a shot. Meyer’s report was supported by Lt. Jeff Artman: “They took a total of thirty-two shots when the provided circumstances made it unsafe to take a single shot. This is how the wrong person was shot and killed,” Meyer wrote in his report. He added that the officers involved in the raid that resulted in Taylor’s death – Jonathan Mattingly, Brett Hankison, and Myles Cosgrove – violated the department’s use-of-force policy when they ignored the risk of hitting someone who did not pose a threat, ABC reported. Meyer said deadly force should have only been used against Walker after he fired a shot.

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Officers who killed Breonna Taylor should not have fired their weapons, internal investigator finds


Officers who killed Breonna Taylor should not have fired their weapons, internal investigator finds
By Marisa Iati The Washington Post,Updated May 10, 2021, 9:16 p.m.
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Louisville demonstrators demanded justice for Breonna Taylor on March 13, the first anniversary of the fatal police raid on her apartment.Joshua Lott/The Washington Post
Two Louisville police officers whose shots struck and killed Breonna Taylor never should have fired their weapons, a department investigator found - a conclusion that the force’s upper brass partly rejected.
While the officers had a right to protect themselves when Taylor's boyfriend fired at them, the "circumstances made it unsafe to take a single shot" in response, Sgt. Andrew Meyer wrote in a Dec. 4 memo summarizing his investigation.

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Internal probe finds officers shouldn't have shot into Breonna Taylor's apartment


 
Two investigators who conducted an internal probe into the death of Breonna Taylor determined the three Louisville Metro Police Department officers involved should not have fired shots into her apartment.
According to documents obtained by ABC News, Sgt. Andrew Meyer from the department's Professional Standards Unit determined that the three officers should have held their fire after Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired a shot.
Meyer’s report was supported by Lt. Jeff Artman, ABC reported.
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"They took a total of thirty-two shots, when the provided circumstances made it unsafe to take a single shot. This is how the wrong person was shot and killed," Meyer wrote in his report.

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Officers shouldn't have fired into Breonna Taylor's home: Report


Officers shouldn't have fired into Breonna Taylor's home: Report
Carly Roman
© Dylan T. Lovan/AP
A billboard sponsored by O, The Oprah Magazine, is on display with with a photo of Breonna Taylor, Friday, Aug. 7, 2020 in Louisville, KY. Twenty-six billboards are going up across Louisville, demanding that the police officers involved in Taylor's death be arrested and charged. Taylor was shot multiple times March 13 when police officers burst into her Louisville apartment using a no-knock warrant during a narcotics investigation. No drugs were found. (AP Photo/Dylan T. Lovan)
The officers who fatally shot Breonna Taylor should not have been firing into her home, an internal investigation says.

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City probe into death of Breonna Taylor says Louisville officers shouldn't have fired into her home


Two investigators conducted an internal probe into the death of Breonna Taylor 
They determined three Louisville police officers involved should not have fired shots into her apartment
Professional Standards Unit determined the three officers should have held their fire after Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired a shot
Jonathan Mattingly, Brett Hankison and Myles Cosgrove violated department’s use-of-force policy when they ignored the risk of hitting someone
Officers fired a total of 32 shots during the home invasion in March 2020
Assessment contradicts what was said by others in Kentucky law enforcement 
Kentucky Attorney General said officers were justified in using force because Walker fired a shot

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Officers shouldn't have fired into Breonna Taylor's home, documents reportedly show


Courtesy Tamika Palmer
(LOUISVILLE, Ky.) — Newly released documents from an internal probe into the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor shows two investigators determined that none of the officers involved in serving a 2020 narcotics warrant at the 26-year-old’s apartment should have fired their gun, but the findings were contradicted by senior officials in the Louisville Metro Police Department, according to news media reports.
Sgt. Andrew Meyer of the police department’s Professional Standards Unit determined in a preliminary report dated Dec. 4 that the three officers involved in the March 13, 2020, shooting should have held their fire after Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, shot one of them, according to the documents obtained by ABC affiliate station WHAS-TV and the Courier Journal newspaper, both in Louisville.

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Police Shouldn't Have Opened Fire in Breonna Taylor's Home: Report


First Posted: May 10, 2021 02:08 AM EDT
Photo : Patrick Smith/Getty Images
An internal investigation found that police officers involved in the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor should not have fired their guns.
The internal probe's findings were contradicted by senior officials in the Louisville Metro Police Department, according to an ABC News Go report.
Sgt. Andrew Meyer concluded on his preliminary report on December 4 that the three officers involved in the shooting should have held their fire after Taylor's boyfriend shot one of them. He further wrote that the police officers took thirty-two shots.
Meyer was a member of the police department's Professional Standards Unit.

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Probe finds cops shouldn't have shot into Breonna Taylor's apartment?


AP Photo/Darron Cummings
After multiple probes and a grand jury concluded that the shooting of Breonna Taylor by the Louisville Police was a tragic combination of circumstances, two investigators from the LPD’s Professional Standards Unit have upset the apple cart yet again by reaching a different conclusion. It’s been just shy of fourteen months since the shooting took place and it feels like everyone and their mother have investigated the events of that night, eventually releasing all of the findings to the public for inspection. How these investigators reached this conclusion isn’t exactly clear, but they did offer something by way of an explanation. Apparently, one police officer being shot in the leg by someone in a dimly lit apartment wasn’t sufficient justification for returning fire. (The Hill)

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