Showing posts with label Benjamin Crump. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benjamin Crump. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Bring Breonna Taylor's Killers To Justice

Op Ed: Cops judges and prosecutors love Gestapo style no knock raids because it give cops a chance to murder Americans and plant evidence. Undoubtedly race plays a role but what happened to Breonna Taylor happens to many Americans regardless of race. 


As it stands now, cops, judges and prosecutors are above the law under an unconstitutional concept called qualified immunity. Until that changes cops can break into your house, search your car, steal from you and kill from by claiming, one they has suspicion and two, the feared for their lives. 


Breonna Taylor Was Killed by Police in Her Home in March and The Officers Have Yet to Be Arrested

Photo credit: JASON CONNOLLY - Getty Images
Photo credit: JASON CONNOLLY - Getty Images
Breonna Taylor was only 26 when she was shot and killed by police in her own home. Taylor, who worked as an emergency medical technician, was in her Kentucky apartment with her boyfriend when police attempted what has now been referred to as a “botched” search warrant execution on March 13th.

Her family has since filed a wrongful death lawsuit and hired Benjamin Crump, a civil rights attorney who is also representing the families of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery. More than two months after Arbery’s death, the two white men who have been accused of shooting him were finally arrested, and the former officer who pinned Floyd down with his knee has been arrested and charged. However, the officers involved in Taylor's shooting have yet to be arrested or fired.
“They’re killing our sisters just like they’re killing our brothers, but for whatever reason, we have not given our sisters the same attention that we have given to Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Stephon Clark, Terence Crutcher, Alton Sterling, Philando Castile, Eric Garner, Laquan McDonald,” Crump told The Washington Post. "Breonna’s name should be known by everybody in America who said those other names, because she was in her own home, doing absolutely nothing wrong.” He continued, “If you ran for Ahmaud, you need to stand for Bre.”
Below, what you need to know about Taylor’s case.

What happened on March 13th?

In the early morning, police officers came to Taylor’s apartment where her and her boyfriend Kenneth Walker were sleeping. According to The Associated Press, police had a warrant to search Taylor’s apartment as part of a drug investigation, though the family’s lawsuit states the suspect in the investigation had already been detained at the time of the search. Police believed one of the suspects was using Taylor’s apartment to “receive mail, keep drugs or stash money earned from the sale of drugs,” according to the Louisville Courier-Journal.
The suit states Taylor and Walker believed the plainclothes police were breaking into the apartment since they entered “without knocking and without announcing themselves as police officers.” A judge had signed a “no-knock” provision for the police, meaning they were able to go into Taylor’s apartment without identifying themselves, though police claim they did. Walker called 911 and shot at a police officer in what he says was self-defense. Police then fired into the apartment, hitting Taylor eight times. The suit says Taylor was unarmed and Walker had a license to carry.

Walker’s attorney wrote in a motion, "While police may claim to have identified themselves, they did not. Mr. Walker and Ms. Taylor again heard a large bang on the door. Again, when they inquired there was no response that there was police outside. At this point, the door suddenly explodes. Counsel believes that police hit the door with a battering ram.” The lawsuit filed by Taylor’s family also states that neighbors have confirmed the police did not knock or identify themselves before entering.
One officer was shot in the leg, and Walker was arrested and charged with assault and attempted murder of a police officer. Prosecutors have since dismissed the charges for now.
The Associated Press reports that no drugs were found in the apartment, and Taylor and Walker had no prior criminal history or drug convictions.

What do we know about the case?

Taylor’s family has filed a lawsuit, accusing the officers of wrongful death, excessive force, and gross negligence, according to The Washington Post. The officers have yet to be charged, though police opened an internal investigation and placed the officers involved on administrative leave.

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer has since announced that "no-knock" warrants have been temporarily suspended. Previously, he had announced officers would now be required to get a sign-off from the chief of police "or a designee" plus a judge for this kind of warrant. Fischer has also said a new police chief will be named, body cameras will now be required when executing a search warrant, and there will be a new civilian review board for "police disciplinary matters," according to the New York Times.

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear also said the local prosecutor, state attorney general, and federal prosecutor assigned to the region should review the results of the police investigation. He called reports about Taylor’s death “troubling,” according to the Times. The FBI is also now investigating the shooting.

What has Taylor’s family said?

In an interview with the 19th, Taylor’s mother Tamika Palmer said she first found out something was wrong when she got a call from Walker, who said he thought someone was trying to break into the apartment. He then said, “I think they shot Breonna.”
“I want justice for her,” Palmer said. “I want them to say her name. There’s no reason Breonna should be dead at all.”
Palmer also told the Courier-Journal that Taylor was working on plans for her future: "She had a whole plan on becoming a nurse and buying a house and then starting a family. Breonna had her head on straight, and she was a very decent person."
Taylor’s sister Ju’Niyah Palmer has posted photos on social media using the hashtag #JusticeForBre. “I’m just getting awareness for my sister, for people to know who she is, what her name is,” she said. “It is literally just as equal. There’s no difference.”

How to help:


  • Grassroots Law Project has reported that this Wednesday the Louisville Metro Council Public Safety Committee will be voting on legislation called Breonna's Law that would effectively ban "no-knock" raids and provided the numbers of council members to call prior to the vote.
  • You can also sign a petition here and here to demand justice for Taylor's death.
  • Find information on how to contact Mayor Fischer and the Louisville Metro Police Department here.
  • Donate to the Louisville Community Bail Fund here.
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Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Trump's Storm Troopers Kill Another Innocent African American

Family of Louisville woman killed by police in her apartment hires lawyer from Ahmaud Arbery case


LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The family of Breonna Taylor, a decorated Louisville EMT who was fatally shot by police, has hired a prominent civil rights attorney with the Black Lives Matter movement in their lawsuit against three officers.
Taylor, 26, was shot eight times by Louisville Metro Police officers who entered her apartment around 1 a.m. March 13. Police have said the officers were serving a search warrant as part of a narcotics investigation, but no drugs were found at the home.
Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly and officers Brett Hankison and Myles Cosgrove entered Taylor's residence without knocking or identifying themselves as police, according to the family's lawsuit, which cited statements from multiple neighbors.
Taylor and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, were awakened by the officers' entry and believed their home was being broken into, the suit says.
Police say Walker shot Mattingly. Walker faces criminal charges of first-degree assault and attempted murder of a police officer, but no drug charges. The suit states that Walker has a license to carry and kept firearms in the home for protection.
Taylor had no criminal record.
The lawsuit alleges that police fired more than 20 rounds into Taylor's home, striking objects in the living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, both bedrooms and into an adjacent residence where a 5-year-old child and pregnant mother were present.
Photos of Breonna Taylor were displayed during a vigil for her outside the Judicial Center in downtown Louisville, Ky. on March 19.
Photos of Breonna Taylor were displayed during a vigil for her outside the Judicial Center in downtown Louisville, Ky. on March 19.
"Breonna had committed no crime, posed no immediate threat to the safety of the defendants and did not actively resist or attempt to evade arrest prior to being repeatedly shot and killed by the defendants," the suit says.
The suit alleges wrongful death, excessive force and gross negligence on the part of the officers. It seeks compensatory and punitive damages, as well as legal fees through a jury trial.

Demanding answers from the police

Taylor's family is calling on lawyer Benjamin Crump, a Tallahassee, Florida-based attorney who has become known for his involvement in high-profile cases of black Americans killed in controversial shootings, including Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Tamir Rice.
Crump also is representing the family of Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old black man who was shot and killed by two white men in Georgia in late February. The case has drawn national attention after a video of Arbery's death surfaced online last week.
In an announcement Monday morning, Crump called Taylor's death "inexcusable" and said no one from Louisville police has been held accountable for her death.
“We stand with the family of this young woman in demanding answers from the Louisville Police Department," Crump said. "Despite the tragic circumstances surrounding her death, the department has not provided any answers regarding the facts and circumstances of how this tragedy occurred, nor have they taken responsibility for her senseless killing."
Crump joins local attorneys Sam Aguiar and Lonita Baker in representing the family.
Aguiar told The Courier Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network, on Monday that people across the country are "demanding justice on this case, and they have good reason." 
A spokeswoman for LMPD declined to answer Courier Journal questions about the case, citing an ongoing internal investigation.
"We held a press conference about this shooting when it occurred to detail what we were able," spokeswoman Jessie Halladay wrote in an email. "The Public Integrity investigation remains ongoing, therefore it would not be appropriate for us to comment."
According to the lawsuit, LMPD executed at least two search warrants — including one at Taylor's home — in the early morning of March 13 in an attempt to locate a suspect named Jamarcus Glover.
But police had already located Glover at his home and detained him before executing the warrant at Taylor's residence, the suit says.
Glover's home is more than 10 miles from Taylor's home on Springfield Drive, records show. He faces drug and gun charges.

Calls for mayor, governor to act

Taylor's family members said she was kind, hardworking and honest and that they were angry she was dead at age 26. The Jefferson County coroner confirmed she was killed in the shooting.
"She really did not deserve to end her life so horrifically," Taylor's aunt, Bianca Austin, said in an interview.
She said Taylor became a certified EMT in 2017 and loved her work as a part-time nurse at Norton Healthcare and an ER technician at University of Louisville Health Jewish East.
After the shooting initially occurred, police described Taylor as a suspect.
No body camera footage is available because officers in the Criminal Interdiction Division who conducted the search warrant do not wear cameras, LMPD Chief Steve Conrad previously said.
Mattingly, the injured officer, underwent surgery. He and the two other detectives have been placed on administrative leave as police conduct an investigation into the shooting, according to Conrad.
Though Taylor was killed nearly two months ago, her case gained national attention over the weekend after prominent activist Shaun King posted her story on social media.
King called on charges to be filed immediately against the officers and for Mayor Greg Fischer to intervene in the investigation, writing "It's shameful that he hasn't."
King also called on Gov. Andy Beshear, whom he called a "good man," to break his silence on the case and "step up since nobody else will."
A Change.org petition supporting Taylor and demanding charges against the officers had collected more than 2,000 signatures before 4 p.m. Monday.
Representatives for Beshear did not return a request for comment Monday.
Fischer called for a "thorough investigation" on Tuesday and said he would monitor the case closely. 
"Police work can involve incredibly difficult situations. Additionally, residents have rights," Fischer wrote in a statement posted on Twitter. "These two concepts will and must be weighed by our justice system as the case proceeds." 
Other city officials, including Metro Councilwoman Jessica Green, D-1st District, have called for leaders to condemn what occurred. 
"The reality is, LMPD was wrong in this situation. An innocent woman was murdered in her home," Green said. "If that isn't the type of thing to sicken somebody, then I don't know what would be."
"Leadership requires getting out in front of things, and not just acting like it never happened or letting it play out," she added.
Another councilwoman, Keisha Dorsey, D-3rd, posted on Facebook that she's calling on the prosecutors to drop all charges against Walker, and on Fischer to demand that LMPD create a clear policy on executing warrants and police identification, as well as for all police divisions to wear body cameras. 
Green said she took her 10-year-old son, who loves running, out on Friday to run 2.23 miles in honor of Arbery, who was killed Feb. 23. 
"It is not easy to be a black person in this country, even in Louisville, Kentucky. People sometimes forget that," she said. "The idea that you can be killed, even when you are doing everything right, is just sickening." 
Follow Tessa Duvall on Twitter: @TessaDuvall
This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Breonna Taylor killing: Family hires attorney from Ahmaud Arbery case
Op Ed: The only people who will ultimately pay for this murder, maiming and false arrest are the taxpayers. That's how it works in a Nazi style Police state. The piggies have what's called qualified immunity which means all the have to do is say after they murder someone is, "I was in fear for my life". Nazi loving judges give out search warrants like they are Monopoly money. The piggies, in their lust to kill, violate rights, destroy property, terrorize people, confiscate drugs that they can resell and use no knock raids just like in Nazi Germany.
This needs to stop but it won't stop because the incarceration depends on false arrests to fill their jails and prisons.
The murderous piggies and prosecutors and judge will get away with this as the taxpayers foot the bill.

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