Imperial Valley Press

Kentucky bill criminaliz­ing taunts against police stalls

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FRANKFORT, Ky (AP) — A bill that would make it a crime to taunt a police officer in Kentucky has stalled in the state’s House of Representa­tives and appears unlikely to pass, but the fate of a proposal to ban no-knock warrants statewide is less certain more than a year after the police killing of Breonna Taylor.

Lawmakers failed to bring the anti- taunting legislatio­n up for a vote by Tuesday night. With less than two weeks left in the legislativ­e session, under the legislatur­e’s own rules, the General Assembly would not have the opportunit­y to override a veto by Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear, despite Republican­s supermajor­ities in both the House and Senate.

A partial ban on noknock warrants passed the Kentucky Senate last month, but two representa­tives, both retired Kentucky State police officers, have proposed amendments that some warn would nullify the bill. GOP Senate President Robert Stivers, who sponsored the bill, has said there is a chance the governor would sign it into law if a bipartisan consensus is met.

The separate anti-taunting legislatio­n would have made it a misdemeano­r for anyone who “accosts, insults, taunts, or challenges a law enforcemen­t officer with offensive or derisive words, or by gestures or other physical contact, that would have a direct tendency to provoke a violent response.” Offenders would have faced up to 90 days in jail and fines, and the proposal also would have increased penalties for rioting.

State Sen. Danny Carroll, a Republican and former police officer, has said he filed the measure in response to months of demonstrat­ions in Louisville, where large protests occurred last year in the wake of Breonna Taylor’s death.

Taylor, a Black woman, was shot in her Louisville home multiple times by police during a botched drug raid. A grand jury indicted one officer on wanton endangerme­nt

charges in September for shooting into a neighbor’s apartment, but no officers were charged in connection with her death. That was based in part on the presentati­on of Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, who recommende­d no charges against the officers who shot into Taylor’s apartment.

Police had a no-knock warrant but said they knocked and announced their presence before entering Taylor’s apartment, a claim some witnesses have disputed. No drugs were found in Taylor’s apartment.

Under the proposed noknock warrant bill, the warrants would only be issued if there was “clear and convincing evidence” that the “crime alleged is a crime that would qualify a person, if convicted, as a violent offender.” The warrants would also have to be executed between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m.

One House floor amendment would lengthen the execution time to midnight and permit officers to consult with the attorney general’s office before a raid, nixing a requiremen­t that they only consult a local prosecutor. Another change would authorize no- knock warrants for suspected drug crimes. It would also permit the use of audio recorders instead of body cameras.

“These amendments undermine the intent of the bill to such a degree that, if included, the status quo will be maintained and we will still be stuck with the same harmful laws and practices that led to the tragic death of Breon

na Taylor,” said Carmen Mitchell, an analyst for the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy.

Democratic lawmakers and demonstrat­ors have railed against the anti-taunting legislatio­n, warning that it could be used to suppress peaceful protests, particular­ly Black demonstrat­ors who have been at the center of the Louisville protests.

At a March 13 rally in Louisville marking the one- year anniversar­y of Taylor’s death, Sadiqa Reynolds, president of the Louisville Urban League, derided the measure as a “shut-up-and-take-it bill.”

Jecorey Arthur, Louisville city council member from Louisville’s predominan­tly Black West End neighborho­od, also joined State. Rep. Attica Scott in criticizin­g the bill on a locally televised panel Monday night.

Arthur and others say the proposal violates First Amendment rights to free speech.

“It’s silly because it’s outright unconstitu­tional, and it’s serious because it really sends a strong message, sends a statement that some of our law enforcemen­t, some of the people across this Commonweal­th care more about white feelings than Black killings,” Arthur said.

Lawmakers in Indiana, Alabama, Utah, and other GOP-led states have also proposed legislatio­n that would increase penalties for rioting. Under a Tennessee law passed last year, protesters could lose their right to vote for breaking certain laws during demonstrat­ions.

 ?? AP PHOTO/TIMOTHY D EASLEY ?? A protester holds up a painting of Breonna Taylor during a rally on the one year anniversar­y of her death at Jefferson Square Park in Louisville, Ky., Saturday.
AP PHOTO/TIMOTHY D EASLEY A protester holds up a painting of Breonna Taylor during a rally on the one year anniversar­y of her death at Jefferson Square Park in Louisville, Ky., Saturday.

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