Days after Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron released 15 hours of audio from grand jury proceedings related to the killing of Breonna Taylor, attorneys for Taylorâs family are calling for Gov. Andy Beshear to appoint a new special prosecutor.
As ABC News reports, Taylorâs family wants the case against the Louisville Metro Police who fatally shot her to be reopened, criticizing Cameron for not presenting homicide charges for the grand jury to consider.
Suggested Reading
âCameron did not serve as an unbiased prosecutor in this case and intentionally did not present charges to the grand jury that would have pursued justice for Ms. Taylor,â read the open letter, which was shared by attorney Ben Crump.
âItâs an affront to justice that after Louisville police officers unlawfully broke into Breonna Taylorâs apartment and fatally shot her five times, only one officer faces minor charges, and for the bullets that didnât hit Ms. Taylor,â the letter continued, referring to the three charges of wanton endangerment facing former LMPD detective Brett Hankison.
Hankison, who has previously faced accusations of sexual assault and planting evidence, was indicted for shooting recklessly at Taylorâs home, potentially causing danger to her neighbors.
The letter requested 10,000 signatures to support the petition. As of Monday afternoon, 8,000 people had signed on to the letter.
âTogether, we demand a new grand jury to reopen Breonna Taylorâs case, immediately,â wrote Taylorâs attorneys.
Less than two weeks have passed since the grand jury announced its indictments in the Taylor case, but the aftermath of the announcement has brought about a number of substantial twists and turns. Last week, an anonymous member of the grand jury asked for Cameron to release audio from the proceedings, as well as permission to speak freely about the process. Following a judgeâs ruling that the audio be released to the court as part of Hankisonâs case file, Cameron turned over 15 hours out of a reported 20+ hours of audio detailing what prosecutors presented to the jury.
The audio included witness testimony and helped shed light on concerns voiced by jurors. But the recordings did not include Cameronâs recommendations to the grand jury on what charges to bring forward.
Taylorâs family has taken issue with how state prosecutors handled the case, suggesting that Cameronâs office was not thorough in their presentation of the evidence.
Cameron admitted last week that he only recommended one charge in the Taylor caseâwanton endangerment against Hankison. In his earlier comments, Cameron had implied the jury agreed with him in deciding not to press harsher charges against the LMPD officers. The anonymous grand juror took issue with this claim, saying they were not aware they could press charges against Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly and Detective Myles Cosgrove, who fatally shot Taylor that night.
âWhen the grand jurors asked about seeing more body camera video and they actually wanted to see all the body camera video the prosecutor said, âwe donât have time,ââ family attorney Lonita Baker told WHAS11 News. âThatâs also overstepping their role as an adviser to the grand jury.â
Also at issue is whether LMPD announced their presence at Taylorâs home on March 13. Attorneys for Taylorâs family say 11 witnesses told them they hadnât heard officers announce themselves. The one witness who told grand jurors he did hear police announce their presence had previously told investigators he hadnât heard them do so.
Detectives seeking the âno-knock warrantâ at the 26-year-old emergency medical technicianâs home on March 13 testified theyâd announced their presence, saying they were explicitly told to do so because Taylorâs goddaughter could be in the apartment.
The detectives also admitted to jurors that the actual target of the drug raid performed at Taylorâs homeâher ex-boyfriendâwas already in police custody by the time officers arrived at her apartment.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.