The Morning Call

Ky. cops in deadly Taylor raid thought she was home alone

- By Dylan Lovan

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Louisville police officers who fatally shot Breonna Taylor while serving a warrant were told she should be home alone because the main target of the narcotics investigat­ion was elsewhere, according to an interview with one of the detectives who served the warrant.

Taylor was shot eight times after officers used a battering ram to knock down her door and fired into the apartment after midnight March 13. One officer was shot by Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, who said he thought an intruder was breaking into the home.

The slaying set off weeks of protests, policy changes and a call for the officers who shot Taylor to be criminally charged. Global protests on behalf of Taylor, George Floyd in Minnesota and others have been part of national reckoning over racism and police brutality.

Sgt. Johnathan Mattingly, who was shot in the leg by Walker, spoke to Louisville Police internal investigat­ors about two weeks after the raid. NBC News obtained the interview with Mattingly and another with Walker and released them Thursday. Several key parts of the interviews were played for the public in May when an attempted murder charge against Walker was dropped.

Mattingly said ahead of the raid officers were told Taylor’s apartment on the ground floor was a “soft target” and Taylor “should be there alone, because they knew where their target was and I guess they thought that he was her only boyfriend or only acquaintan­ce.” Police were conducting a wide-ranging drug investigat­ion that night.

That target was an alleged drug dealer named Jamarcus Glover, who was arrested on traffickin­g charges the same night 10 miles away on a separate warrant. Taylor had a previous relationsh­ip with Glover.

Earlier this week, lawyers for Taylor’s mother filed an amended civil lawsuit that alleged police initially called off the warrant search at Taylor’s apartment but then went ahead with it to attempt to locate other drug suspects with no connection to Taylor. Glover had already been apprehende­d, the lawsuit said.

Mattingly told investigat­ors in the interview recording that officers briefed on the raid were told Glover had packages sent to her apartment in her name.

Taylor “possibly held dope for him, received the packages and held his money,” Mattingly said he was told of Taylor’s involvemen­t. No drugs were found at Taylor’s home.

Police had secured a “noknock” warrant for Taylor’s apartment, but Walker and Mattingly confirmed that police knocked on Taylor’s door. The warrants have since been banned by a Louisville ordinance named for Taylor. State legislator­s on Thursday were also discussing a bill for a statewide ban of the controvers­ial warrants. The bill would be introduced in January.

Mattingly told investigat­ors officers knocked for about 45 seconds to a minute before using the ram. He entered the home after the door was breached and saw two people, one with a gun, he said.

It was Walker, who moments earlier was lying in bed with Taylor and watching a movie, Walker told investigat­ors.

“I’m trying to protect her, she didn’t have a gun,” Walker said of Taylor. Walker said he fired one shot toward the ground just as the door was being bashed in. That bullet hit Mattingly in the left thigh. Mattingly then fired about six shots, he said, and then scooted out of the apartment.

Mattingly and another Louisville officer, Myles Cosgrove, were placed on administra­tive leave after the shooting. Another officer at the scene, Brett Hankison, has been fired for violating use of force procedures, for “blindly” firing 10 shots into the home, according to police.

Mattingly said Hankison “was a little worked up” that night, and pointed his gun at a neighbor who was yelling at the officers.

Attorneys for Taylor’s family have argued that police had no cause to go search her house.

 ?? SAM AGUIAR ?? Breonna Taylor was at home with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, before she was shot by police eight times in March.
SAM AGUIAR Breonna Taylor was at home with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, before she was shot by police eight times in March.

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