Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Lawyer: Plea offer tried to link Breonna Taylor to drug ring

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A lawyer for Breonna Taylor’s family said prosecutor­s offered a plea deal to an accused drug trafficker that would have forced him to implicate Taylor in criminal activity after her killing by police had pushed her name to the forefront of a national reckoning on race.

Louisville’s top prosecutor said the document was not an attempt to smear Taylor but was part of preliminar­y plea negotiatio­ns with a man charged with illegal drug traffickin­g.

Taylor family attorney Sam Aguiar posted a photo on social media Monday that he said was a plea offer to Jamarcus Glover from prosecutor­s. The photo of the document appeared to show Taylor listed as a “co- defendant” in illegal activities leading up to April 22, weeks after her death.

“Why would they put her name on there?” Mr. Aguiar said in a statement sent to news media. “It’s outrageous.”

Jefferson County Commonweal­th’s Attorney Tom Wine said that document was a “draft that was part of pre- indictment plea negotiatio­ns.”

Taylor was fatally shot March 13 in her home by police serving a narcotics search warrant as part of a wide- ranging police operation targeting Mr. Glover, Taylor’s former boyfriend. Mr. Glover and others were arrested on drug traffickin­g charges the night Taylor was shot.

The shooting has sparked months of protests in Louisville by activists who along with celebritie­s and athletes have called for the officers to be charged in her death. The plea deal revelation­s came as protesters planned to demonstrat­e this weekend outside the Kentucky Derby, which will be run without fans because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Mr. Wine recused himself in May from an investigat­ion into the police actions on the night Taylor was killed. Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s office is now handling that investigat­ion, which Mr. Cameron has indicated is nearing a conclusion.

Wine issued a statement Monday saying Taylor was never a co- defendant in the case against Mr. Glover.

“Those drafts ( posted by Mr. Aguiar) were never part of the court record and are not court documents,” Mr. Wine said. Mr. Wine said when he was advised of the plea discussion­s, “out of respect for Ms. Taylor, I directed that Ms. Breonna Taylor’s name be removed.”

Mr. Wine provided a copy of what he said was the final plea deal offered to Mr. Glover, which did not include her name but did list her address as a place where Mr. Glover picked up mail packages.

Mr. Aguiar said Tuesday that he had received the photo of the plea deal with Taylor’s name on it from Mr. Glover’s family. Mr. Wine said his final plea offer was sent to Mr. Glover on July 21.

That offer said Mr. Glover would have to accept the deal for a 10- year sentence on a dozen drug charges by July 21. Mr. Glover turned down the deal.

Mr. Wine said Mr. Glover implicated Taylor in his criminal activity in jail phone calls to Taylor.

Jail phone calls reported by news media show Mr. Glover called Taylor 26 times in early January, including some calls to ask her to help him gather bond money.

Also Tuesday, Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, filed a lawsuit seeking an unspecifie­d amount in damages from the city and police for assault, battery, false arrest and malicious prosecutio­n.

Mr. Walker was with Taylor in her apartment and fired a single shot at officers, who he said he thought were intruders breaking into the apartment.

Mr. Walker has said he and Taylor did not hear the police identify themselves as officers before coming through her door.

Mr. Walker was initially charged with attempted murder of a police officer but Mr. Wine dismissed that charge.

 ?? Amy Harris/ Invision/ AP ?? Protesters participat­e in the Good Trouble Tuesday march for Breonna Taylor on Aug. 25 in Louisville, Ky. A lawyer for Ms. Taylor’s family said a plea deal was offered to an accused drug trafficker that would have forced him to implicate Ms. Taylor, who was killed by police in a raid on her home in March.
Amy Harris/ Invision/ AP Protesters participat­e in the Good Trouble Tuesday march for Breonna Taylor on Aug. 25 in Louisville, Ky. A lawyer for Ms. Taylor’s family said a plea deal was offered to an accused drug trafficker that would have forced him to implicate Ms. Taylor, who was killed by police in a raid on her home in March.

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