Rome News-Tribune

‘No easy answer’: Many are asking what next in Breonna Taylor case

- By Dylan Lovan, Rebecca Reynolds Yonker and Piper Hudspeth Blackburn

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — In the wake of the decision not to prosecute Kentucky police officers for killing Breonna Taylor, authoritie­s and activists alike wrestled Thursday with the question of what comes next amid continued demands for justice in the Black woman’s death.

“The question obviously is: What do we do with this pain?” Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer said during a news conference. “There is no one answer, no easy answer to that question.”

Fischer pleaded for calm a day after peaceful protests in Louisville turned violent, and a gunman shot and wounded two police officers. Activists, who were back out chanting Taylor’s name and marching for a second night as police in riot gear blocked roads, vowed to press on after a grand jury Wednesday didn’t bring homicide charges against the officers who burst into her apartment during a drug investigat­ion in March.

Taylor, an emergency medical worker, was shot multiple times by white officers after Taylor’s boyfriend fired at them, authoritie­s said. He said he didn’t know who was coming in and opened fire in self- defense. Police entered on a warrant connected to a suspect who did not live there, and no drugs were found inside.

State Attorney General

Daniel Cameron said the investigat­ion showed officers acted in self- defense; one was wounded. A single officer was charged with wanton endangerme­nt for firing into neighborin­g apartments.

The only possibilit­y for criminal charges against the officers for the killing itself seems to rest with the U.S. Justice Department. The FBI is still investigat­ing whether Taylor’s civil rights were violated. But the burden of proof for such cases is very high, with prosecutor­s having to prove officers knew they were acting illegally and made a willful decision to cause someone’s death.

Returning Thursday to the park in downtown Louisville that has been the hub for protesters, Reginique Jones said she’ll keep pressing for increased police accountabi­lity and for a statewide ban on “no knock” warrants — the kind issued in the Taylor case, though Cameron said the investigat­ion showed police did announce them

selves before entering.

“I believe that we are going to get past this,” Jones said. “We can still get some justice.”

Taylor’s family planned to weigh in at a news conference scheduled for Friday in the park that’s become known as Injustice Square.

Demonstrat­ors kept gathering there Thursday, while others marched through downtown, where police in riot gear turned out in force as the nighttime curfew passed and crowds blocked some roads. Officers blocked the exits of a church where protesters had gathered and have detained some people, including one man they tackled and put in a spit hood.

Kenyatta Hicks said he’s encouraged by increasing­ly diverse crowds that have turned out to protest.

“Nobody should give up,” Hicks said.

Activists, celebritie­s and everyday Americans have called for charges against police since Taylor’s death.

Along with George Floyd, a Black man killed by police in Minneapoli­s, Taylor’s name became a rallying cry during nationwide protests this summer that called out entrenched racism and demanded police reform.

The grand jury’s decision set off a new wave of protests nationwide, with people marching in cities like Philadelph­ia and Rochester, New York, on Thursday, a night after violence marred some demonstrat­ions in cities like Seattle and Portland, Oregon.

Louisville’s mayor has instituted a curfew through the weekend, and Gov. Andy Beshear called up the National Guard for “limited missions.” Protesters streamed through the streets, where stopped cars honked and one man leaned out a sunroof, his fist in the air and shouted, “Black lives matter.”

Earlier, it got heated between some protesters and a group of 12 to 15 armed white people wearing military-style uniforms, but it didn’t turn physical.

Peaceful protests a night earlier gave way to fires set in garbage cans, damage to several vehicles and thefts at stores. Then, two officers were shot.

Larynzo D. Johnson, 26, was charged, and an arrest citation said police had video of him opening fire. Court records did not list a lawyer for Johnson, who was scheduled to be in court Friday.

The two officers were “doing well and will survive their injuries,” interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder said.

 ?? Ap-john Minchillo ?? Protesters march Thursday in Louisville, Ky. Authoritie­s pleaded for calm while activists vowed to fight on in Kentucky’s largest city, where a gunman wounded two officers during protests following the decision not to charge officers for killing Breonna Taylor.
Ap-john Minchillo Protesters march Thursday in Louisville, Ky. Authoritie­s pleaded for calm while activists vowed to fight on in Kentucky’s largest city, where a gunman wounded two officers during protests following the decision not to charge officers for killing Breonna Taylor.
 ?? Ap-john Minchillo ?? An armed counter-protester speaks with Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ors, Thursday in Louisville, Ky.
Ap-john Minchillo An armed counter-protester speaks with Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ors, Thursday in Louisville, Ky.

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