Days after a grand jury was empaneled to decide whether to investigate the police shooting of Breonna Taylor, supporters and activists marked the 6-month anniversary of her killing with 26 hours of prayerâone hour for every year of life the young emergency medical technician lived.
The event was organized by NYC-based social justice organization Until Freedom, which has helped organize protests and rallies in Louisville, Ky., and beyond since Taylorâs death.
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âWe are at our highest point when we are connected to spiritual guidance,â Until Freedom co-founder Tamika Mallory told CNN. âSome people arenât protestors but theyâre in touch with their spirituality, so weâre trying to provide an opportunity to get every person to participate in the fight for justice for Breonna Taylor.â
Taylorâs name and image could be found on courts and racing tracks and social media accounts around the world on Sunday. Among the most notable demonstrations came from British Formula One Driver Lewis Hamilton, who wore a black long-sleeve shirt reading âARREST THE COPS WHO KILLED BREONNA TAYLORâ at the Tuscan Grand Prix race in Mugello, Italy. He wore the shirt again at the top of the podium after his win; Sky Sports reports the Federation Internationale de lâAutomobile (FIA) is âinvestigatingâ his use of the shirt.
New Orleans Saints head coach Sean Payton also wore a face mask bearing her name, and Los Angeles Rams players wore shirts with her image, among other victims of police violence, before their game on Sunday.
Since Taylorâs death on March 13, two of the three officers who raided her apartment still remain with the Louisville Metro Police Department. Brett Hankison, already under investigation for two separate incidents, including allegations of sexual assault, was fired in June but is appealing to get his job back, reports CNN.
Progress has been slow and scattered in the months since LMPD officers raided Taylorâs home, shooting her and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, who survived the firestorm.
Louisville has banned the use of âno-knockâ warrants, which allow police to forcibly enter homes without announcing their presence, and body camera wear is now mandated. Taylorâs death has also helped galvanize the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement, with activists, celebrities, publications, and politicians across the nation invoking her name to call for criminal justice reform.
But the LMPD remains fully funded and no charges have yet been brought against the cops who killed her.
Taylorâs mother, Tamika Palmer, voiced her frustrations with Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, who is leading the investigation into her daughterâs killing, on her Instagram account last week.
âYour mother put everything she had into raising you. If you ask her, she will say without hesitation that she would stop at nothing to protect you,â read Palmerâs post, which tagged Cameron. âIf you were gunned down in your own home, wouldnât she demand the killers be brought to justice?â
âDo you have the power and courage to call my child yours, the power to see that my cry and my communityâs cry is heard, and the power as part of a village who raises our children to do right by one of our daughters?!â
Walker also spoke out last week through one of his attorneys, Steve Romines. According to Romines, Walker is racked with survivorâs guilt from his encounter with police on March 13. Walker was charged with attempted murder after LMPD claimed he shot and injured an officer after he came down to confront what he thought were intruders to Taylorâs apartment. Prosecutors dropped the charges against the 28-year-old, but while he was held in jail on a full $250,000 cash bond, Walker missed Taylorâs funeral.
Walker is now suing the LMPD and the city of Louisville.
âWhen you are shot at and when you see a loved one basically executed in front of you, you never recover from that,â Romines told NBC News. âIt is something that haunts him every single night.â
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