San Diego Union-Tribune

MAYOR OF LOUISVILLE DECLARES EMERGENCY

Buildings boarded up as city awaits decision in Breonna Taylor killing

- BY TIM CRAIG Craig writes for The Washington Post.

Buildings have been boarded up and highway access restricted in Kentucky’s largest city as residents brace for a possible announceme­nt from the state attorney general on whether charges will be filed against officers involved in the death of Breonna Taylor, the 26year-old Black woman who has become an internatio­nal symbol of the racial-justice movement.

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer, a Democrat, declared a state of emergency Tuesday in anticipati­on of an announceme­nt and “the potential for civil unrest.” Law enforcemen­t leaders have canceled days off for police, and officers were told to prepare to work 12-hour shifts.

Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, a Republican, has given no public indication of when he will conclude his four-month investigat­ion of the drug raid that led to the fatal shooting of Taylor in her apartment shortly after midnight March 13. “An investigat­ion, if done properly, cannot follow a specific timeline,” he said in a statement earlier this month.

One of the officers involved in the Taylor case, Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly, sparked more controvers­y in the city — which has experience­d more than four months of protests — with an email to fellow officers Tuesday morning that characteri­zed police as defenders of order against forces of evil.

“You DO NOT DESERVE to be in this position,” Mattingly told the officers. “The position that allows thugs to get in your face and yell, curse and degrade you. Throw bricks, bottles and urine on you and expect you to do nothing. It goes against

EVERYTHING we were all taught in the academy.”

Kent Wicker, an attorney for Mattingly, confirmed his client sent the email.

Louisville police killed Taylor while executing a “no knock” search warrant. They uncovered no illegal substances in her apartment, which they entered using a battering ram. Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, 27, who said he feared intruders, fired a shot with a legally owned gun, striking Mattingly. The officers fired back, and Taylor was struck five times.

Officer Brett Hankison was terminated in June in a letter from the department that alleged he “blindly” fired his weapon 10 times into Taylor’s apartment. Mattingly and Officer Myles Cosgrove, who also fired into Taylor’s apartment, have been placed on administra­tive leave.

Cameron’s office began investigat­ing the shooting after Louisville police turned over the results of an internal probe in May.

A decision about charges could hinge upon an interpreta­tion of Kentucky’s “castle doctrine.” Legal analysts have said the law allows someone to use lethal force if they fear for their life when faced with a possible aggressor. But Kentucky’s castle doctrine has an explicit exception for situations in which “a peace officer . . . enters or attempts to enter a dwelling, residence, or vehicle in the performanc­e of his or her official duties, and the officer identified himself or herself in accordance with any applicable law.”

Fischer, a Democrat, said Tuesday that he does not know when Cameron will announce his decision in the case, but he signaled it could be imminent.

 ?? JEFF DEAN GETTY IMAGES ?? A worker boards up a business in downtown Louisville, Ky., in anticipati­on of the results of a grand jury inquiry into the death of Breonna Taylor, a Black woman shot by a Louisville police.
JEFF DEAN GETTY IMAGES A worker boards up a business in downtown Louisville, Ky., in anticipati­on of the results of a grand jury inquiry into the death of Breonna Taylor, a Black woman shot by a Louisville police.

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