The Denver Post

Louisville preparing for announceme­nt from AG

- By Dylan Lovan and Rebecca Reynolds Yonker

KY. » Officials in Kentucky’s largest city were preparing Tuesday for more protests and possible unrest as the public nervously awaits the state attorney general’s announceme­nt about whether he will charge officers in Breonna Taylor’s shooting death.

With timing of the announceme­nt still uncertain, Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer declared a state of emergency due to the potential for civil unrest, hours after police said they would restrict access in the city’s downtown area. The mayor and police said they were trying to plan ahead of time to protect both demonstrat­ors and the people who live and work there.

But some involved in protests seeking justice for Taylor questioned why the police were going to such lengths when the city has been the site of peaceful protests for months.

Attorney General Daniel Cameron has declined to set a deadline for his decision. Earlier this month, he remarked that “an investigat­ion, if done properly, cannot follow a certain timeline.”

Interim Police Chief Robert

Schroeder said officials from Cameron’s office have promised to try to give authoritie­s a heads- up.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said the measures taken by Louisville police are due to the intense scrutiny of the Taylor case, in Louisville and around the country.

“The national attention here is so great, the potential for outsiders so significan­t, the possibilit­y of someone taking something peaceful and trying to turn it into something that’s not, is all there,” Beshear said.

In a news release Tuesday, the Louisville Metro Police Department said it was placing barricades around Jefferson Square Park, where protests over Taylor’s death have been held, and the perimeter of the downtown area; allowing only pedestrian­s in the blocks immediatel­y surroundin­g the park; restrictin­g vehicle traffic in other areas of downtown and limiting access to parking garages.

Sadiqa Reynolds, who heads the nonprofit Louisville Urban League and lives downtown, described the city’s measures as “overkill.”

“This is certainly an overrespon­se to the local protests that have been happening in our community,” she said.

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