The Star Malaysia

US officer tied to Breonna Taylor killing to be fired

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A US police officer involved in the fatal shooting of black American Breonna Taylor as she slept at home is to be fired, Louisville’s mayor announced in a significan­t step in a case that has fuelled racial tensions nationwide.

Louisville’s police chief is “initiating terminatio­n procedures against Louisville Metro Police Officer Brett Hankison,” Mayor Greg Fischer’s office said on Friday.

“Unfortunat­ely, due to a provision in state law that I very much would like to see changed, both the chief and I are precluded from talking about what brought us to this moment, or even the timing of this decision,” the mayor said.

Taylor, a 26-year-old emergency health worker, died March 13 when police officers operating under a no-knock warrant burst into her apartment, firing at least eight bullets at Taylor as she and her boyfriend were in bed.

Taylor’s boyfriend took out his licensed gun and fired it when he heard the plaincloth­es police attempting to break down the door, investigat­ors reportedly said.

Officers had the wrong address and used a battering ram to enter the Louisville apartment without warning.

They were searching for a suspect who was already in custody, Taylor’s family’s lawyer Benjamin Crump has said.

The case helped trigger fresh waves of anger in the United States over racial injustice and police brutality.

Those protests expanded dramatical­ly after the May 25 killing of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died after a white police officer pinned his knee to Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes.

Senator Kamala Harris said the announceme­nt was “a start, but not good enough”.

“We cannot rest until all the officers involved in Breonna Taylor’s murder are charged,” she tweeted.

Louisville police chief Robert Schroeder reportedly wrote a letter to Hankinson accusing the officer of “blindly” firing into Taylor’s apartment.

“I am alarmed and stunned you used deadly force in this fashion,” Schroeder wrote in the letter, according to the Louisville CourierJou­rnal.

“Your conduct demands your terminatio­n,” the chief added.

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