The risk assessment for Breonna Taylor’s home was scored low enough to avoid consulting with or turning over the raid to a better-trained SWAT team.
Author: Tessa Duvall and Darcy Costello, Louisville Courier Journal
Louisville police officially fire 2 detectives for their roles in fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor
The Louisville Metro Police Department fired Detectives Myles Cosgrove and Joshua Jaynes for their actions in the raid that left Breonna Taylor dead.
Louisville police seek to fire detective who got search warrant for Breonna Taylor’s home
Detective Joshua Jaynes sought the no-knock search warrant that led seven detectives to Breonna Taylor’s apartment the night she was fatally shot.
Breonna Taylor’s name is a national rallying cry. Will it be enough to charge the police?
Her name has echoed in streets. It’s on signs, LeBron’s shoes and magazine covers. Will that pressure be enough to get the results protesters demand?
Breonna Taylor was alive after police shot her. But no one tried to treat her.
For several minutes after police shot her, Breonna Taylor struggled, coughing for breath before she died, according to her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker.
Police interviews say Breonna Taylor’s home was a ‘soft target,’ suspect already located
Louisville Metro Police at Breonna Taylor’s apartment were told it was a “soft target,” according to newly released interviews.
Breonna Taylor died but she wasn’t target of investigation. Police had ‘no-knock’ warrant, records show
The Louisville Metro Police investigation that led officers to Breonna Taylor’s home centered around a “trap house” 10 miles from her apartment.