USA TODAY US Edition

Louisville mayor calls state of emergency

Potential for unrest over report on Taylor shooting

- Sarah Ladd and Lucas Aulbach Louisville Courier Journal USA TODAY NETWORK

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Mayor Greg Fischer issued a state of emergency Tuesday for Louisville as the city’s police began restrictin­g access downtown in anticipati­on of an announceme­nt on the Breonna Taylor case by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron.

The order was put in place “due to the potential for civil unrest, which allows (the mayor) to exercise any of his emergency powers, including those to hire or contract for services, and implementi­ng curfews and other restrictio­ns,” according to a statement from the mayor’s office.

Fischer, in the statement, said he doesn’t know when an announceme­nt on the Taylor case is coming.

The police department also declared a state of emergency Monday in order to provide for adequate staffing for whatever situations arise, said interim police Chief Robert Schroeder on Tuesday.

A second executive order restricts access to five downtown parking garages and bans on-street parking. Louisville Metro Police officials put up barricades in a more than 25-block downtown perimeter overnight to keep cars from being able to enter the area.

Meanwhile, all police department off days and vacation requests were canceled Monday to “ensure we have the appropriat­e level of staffing to provide for public safety services and our policing functions,” Louisville police had previously announced.

A decision in the Taylor case could come as soon as this week. The downtown federal courthouse will be closed in anticipati­on of an announceme­nt.

Gov. Andy Beshear said Monday evening that he could not comment on his discussion­s with Cameron about a decision timeline.

Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, was fatally shot by Louisville police in March.

Since late May, protests, demonstrat­ions and marches have filled Louisville. Among the calls for reform is the demand that the officers involved in her death be arrested and criminally charged. Those officers are Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly, Detective Myles Cosgrove and former Detective Brett Hankison,

who was fired in a decision he is contesting.

The police department said early Tuesday that the barricades downtown are to keep the area safe for “those coming downtown to express their First Amendment Rights, as well as those who live and work in the area.”

Police put up vehicle barricades around Jefferson Square Park (the site of ongoing protests) and across the downtown perimeter and will restrict access further near the park, with only pedestrian access allowed.

Officers restricted access to more than 25 blocks downtown, allowing in only those who live or work in the area. Parking and access to garages inside the perimeter will also be limited, according to the department, which asked anyone currently parked in the area to move their car as soon as possible.

The department apologized for the “inconvenie­nce” to those who live and work downtown and stressed in a statement that LMPD officials do not know when Cameron’s decision will be announced.

 ?? MICHAEL CLEVENGER/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Many streets in downtown Louisville are blocked Tuesday in advance of a report on the Breonna Taylor shooting.
MICHAEL CLEVENGER/USA TODAY NETWORK Many streets in downtown Louisville are blocked Tuesday in advance of a report on the Breonna Taylor shooting.

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