Current:Home > MarketsTradeEdge-Ex-Louisville officer who fired shots in Breonna Taylor raid readies for 3rd trial -TradeCircle
TradeEdge-Ex-Louisville officer who fired shots in Breonna Taylor raid readies for 3rd trial
PredictIQ Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-08 03:03:11
LOUISVILLE,TradeEdge Ky. (AP) — A former Louisville police officer accused of acting recklessly when he fired shots into Breonna Taylor’s windows the night of the deadly 2020 police raid is going on trial for a third time.
Federal prosecutors will try again to convict Brett Hankison of civil rights violations after their first effort ended in a mistrial due to a deadlocked jury a year ago. Hankison was also acquitted of wanton endangerment charges for firing 10 shots into Taylor’s apartment at a state trial in 2022.
Jury selection in U.S. District Court in Louisville began Tuesday. In last year’s trial, the process took most of three days.
Hankison is the only officer who has faced a jury trial so far in Taylor’s death, which sparked months of street protests for the fatal shooting of the 26-year-old Black woman by white officers, drawing national attention to police brutality incidents in the summer of 2020. Though he was not one of the officers who shot Taylor, federal prosecutors say Hankison’s actions put Taylor and her boyfriend and her neighbors in danger.
On the night of the raid, Louisville officers went to Taylor’s house to serve a drug warrant, which was later found to be flawed. Taylor’s boyfriend, believing an intruder was barging in, fired a single shot that hit one of the officers, and officers returned fire, striking Taylor in her hallway multiple times.
As those shots were being fired, Hankison, who was behind a group of officers at the door, ran to the side of the apartment and fired into Taylor’s windows, later saying he thought he saw a figure with a rifle and heard assault rifle rounds being fired.
“I had to react,” Hankison testified in last year’s federal trial. “I had no choice.”
Some of the shots went through Taylor’s apartment and into another unit where a couple and a child lived. Those neighbors have testified at Hankison’s previous trials.
Police were looking for drugs and cash in Taylor’s apartment, but they found neither.
At the conclusion of testimony in Hankison’s trial last year, the 12-member jury struggled for days to reach a consensus. Jurors eventually told U.S. District Judge Rebecca Grady Jennings they were deadlocked and could not come to a decision — prompting Jennings’ declaration of a mistrial.
The judge said there were “elevated voices” coming from the jury room at times during deliberations, and court security officials had to visit the room. Jennings said the jury had “a disagreement that they cannot get past.”
Hankison was one of four officers who were charged by the U.S. Department of Justice in 2022 with violating Taylor’s civil rights. The two counts against him carry a maximum penalty of life in prison if he is convicted.
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said Taylor “should be alive today” when he announced the federal charges in August 2022.
But those charges so far have yielded just one conviction — a plea deal from a former Louisville officer who was not at the raid and became a cooperating witness — while felony civil rights charges against two officers accused of falsifying information in the warrant used to enter Taylor’s apartment were thrown out by a judge last month.
In that ruling, a federal judge in Louisville wrote that the actions of Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, who fired a shot at police, were the legal cause of her death, not a bad warrant. The ruling effectively reduced the civil rights violation charges against former officers Joshua Jaynes and Kyle Meany, which had carried a maximum sentence of life in prison, to misdemeanors. They still face other lesser federal charges, and prosecutors have since indicted Jaynes and Meany on additional charges.
veryGood! (969)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Miami-Dade Police Director 'Freddy' Ramirez shot himself following a domestic dispute, police say
- 'Los Angeles Times' to lay off 13% of newsroom
- CBO says debt ceiling deal would cut deficits by $1.5 trillion over the next decade
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- How saving water costs utilities
- A New Project in Rural Oregon Is Letting Farmers Test Drive Electric Tractors in the Name of Science
- Miami-Dade Police Director 'Freddy' Ramirez shot himself following a domestic dispute, police say
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Nueva página web muestra donde se propone contaminar en Houston
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Pump Up the Music Because Ariana Madix Is Officially Joining Dancing With the Stars
- Toxic Releases From Industrial Facilities Compound Maryland’s Water Woes, a New Report Found
- How two big Wall Street banks are rethinking the office for a post-pandemic future
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- These Secrets About Grease Are the Ones That You Want
- See the First Photos of Tom Sandoval Filming Vanderpump Rules After Cheating Scandal
- Teacher's Pet: Mary Kay Letourneau and the Forever Shocking Story of Her Student Affair
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
Amazon must pay over $30 million over claims it invaded privacy with Ring and Alexa
Western Forests, Snowpack and Wildfires Appear Trapped in a Vicious Climate Cycle
Drifting Toward Disaster: the (Second) Rio Grande
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Birmingham honors the Black businessman who quietly backed the Civil Rights Movement
A 3-hour phone call that brought her to tears: Imposter scams cost Americans billions
Britney Spears Condemns Security Attack as Further Evidence of Her Not Being Seen as an Equal Person