Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Felony vs. Taylor protesters tossed

They gathered at home of Ky. attorney general

- By Dylan Lovan

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A prosecutor announced Friday that he is dropping a felony charge against dozens of protesters who gathered at the Kentucky Attorney General’s home to demand justice in Breonna Taylor’s death.

Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s office is heading an investigat­ion into the death of Taylor, who was fatally shot by police conducting a no-knock warrant at her home on March 13.

Among the 87 protesters who gathered at Cameron’s Louisville home on Tuesday were civil rights leaders, a reality TV star and a profession­al football player. Louisville police said some of the protesters had threatened to burn down the house if they didn’t get justice, prompting the felony charge of “intimidati­ng a participan­t in a legal process.”

Jefferson County Attorney Mike O’Connell said in a statement that Louisville police had probable cause for the felony charge, but “in the interest of justice and the promotion of the free exchange of ideas, we will dismiss that charge” for each of the protesters.

Cameron said in an interview with The Associated Press on Friday that he respected O’Connell’s decision to drop the felony charge.

“It certainly was surreal to see folks sitting in my front yard with the express purpose of escalating the situation,” Cameron said.

Cameron, a Republican and Kentucky’s first African American state attorney general, said that he still has no timeline for when his office will conclude its investigat­ion of the Taylor case.

The social justice organizati­on Until Freedom led the sit-in at Cameron’s house. Many protests in recent weeks have pushed for Cameron to move swiftly to charge three officers in Taylor’s killing. Among those arrested Tuesday were NFL player Kenny Stills and Porsha Williams of “Real Housewives of Atlanta.” The protesters were also charged with two misdemeano­rs, disorderly conduct and trespassin­g.

Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, was fatally shot when police officers burst into her Louisville apartment during a narcotics investigat­ion. The warrant to search her home was in connection with a suspect who did not live there, and no drugs were found.

 ?? Mary Ann Gerth The Associated Press ?? In an image from video, a Louisville Metro Police Department officer stands guard outside the home of Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on Tuesday.
Mary Ann Gerth The Associated Press In an image from video, a Louisville Metro Police Department officer stands guard outside the home of Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on Tuesday.

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