We learned during the trial of Ahmaud Arberyâs murderers that there are no rules against the supporters of a victimâs family quietly sitting in the courtroom while observing the proceedings. On multiple occasions, the attorneys for Arberyâs killers, Greg and Travis McMichael and William Bryan, tried to get a judge to bar civil rights icons like the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton from sitting in the courtâs gallery during the trial and rightfully, those motions failed. An entirely different scenario is playing out in Kentucky, where Brett Hankison, a former Louisville cop who was present when Breonna Taylor was killed by police in a botched raid, is on trial. Taylorâs sister, JuâNiyah Palmer, said via social media this morning that an officer she identified as âSherrif Anothey Goffnerâ escorted Palmer and her mother, Tamika Palmer, from the courtroom for wearing clothes featuring images of Taylor in the courtroom.
The website GovSalaries, a database which tracks public employees and officials, lists an Anthony Goffner as an employee of the Jefferson County, Ky., Sheriffâs Office with a 2017 taxpayer-funded salary of $44,343. Another person by the same name was listed as employed by the county at $44,817 in 2020, validating the idea that you get what you pay for.
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Palmerâs post says the officer told her that her jacketâa red and black varsity-style piece with the letter B embroidered on its right side and back and images of Taylorâs face and the date of her death on the right sleeveââisnât acceptedâ in the courtroom. He allegedly ignored the pair when asked if the courtroom had a specific dress code. Again: no law prohibits victimsâ supporters from attending trials of the accused. If there was such a law, it wouldnât be a valid reason for asking the Palmers to leave since Hankison isnât on trial for killing Taylor. No one is.Although itâs been established that multiple cops opened fire in her apartment, that Taylor was hit at least five times and that former Louisville officer Myles Cosgrove actually fired the killshot, no one was charged with killing her in the wake of Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameronâs widely-criticized grand jury investigation of the incident.
Instead, Hankison wound up being the only cop charged, not for shooting Taylor but wanton endangerment for firing 10 rounds into a side door during the âno-knockâ raid. None of Hankisonâs shots hit Taylor, so she isnât, strictly speaking, his victim. Her family members wearing shirts featuring their departed loved oneâs name and face to his trial shouldnât matter to anyone in the courtroom anymore than a shirt featuring the Notorious BIG or Barack Obama.
According to the charges filed by Cameronâs office, Hankison is accused of a crime that has no specific victim. Whoever he allegedly wantonly endangered, it canât have been Taylor, who is dead because of bullets fired by people who arenât sitting next to Hankison in the defendantâs chair in Louisville.
The only thing left to do, then, is to challenge the Palmersâ ejection, and the best way to do that is for as many people as possible to show up to court wearing Breonna Taylorâs face for the rest of the trial. It may be easy for one deputy to eject two women from a courtroom without explanation. Itâs an entirely different proposition to do the same thing to dozens, or hundreds, of people. That would require a show of force, bring out journalists with cameras and microphones and probably civil rights attorneys, demanding the same answer Palmer is seeking: if thereâs no victim, why is wearing Breonna Taylorâs picture at Brian Hankisonâs trial a problem?
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