Breonna Taylor grand jury recordings live updates: What to know
AG Cameron released a statement saying the redacted portions of the 20 hours totaled three minutes and fifty seconds. "Juror deliberations and prosecutor recommendations and statements were not recorded, as they are not evidence,".
“It was supposed to be her and her kid, maybe even her and a small child there. So that’s why we decided to knock. It was a no-knock warrant, but we wanted to give her time. … You could hear movement but there was no answer so (Mattingly) and I decided, let’s go ahead and hit it.”
"Reload, reload." A different neighbor said she heard police say, "Reload, reload, let's do what we need to do," the attorney general's office told jurors.
Detective Herman Hall, of the attorney general's office, told the grand jury on its final day that no drugs were found in Taylor's apartment, which was known. Responding to questions from the grand jury, he also said there was no master plan for the search other than what was written on a white board.
Hall also was asked why the officers involved in the raid were not wearing body cameras.
“I can’t answer that,” he said. “I don’t know why body-cams weren’t used for that.”
“The warrant was … a no-knock warrant,” Fogg said. “They decided to serve it as a knock warrant, a knock-and-announce.”
Fogg does not elaborate at that point how he concluded the warrant was served as a knock-and-announce.
@TessaDuvall
An investigator said Summer Dickerson heard the shooting and called 911. She recognized an officer on-scene and asks what happened. “Some drug-dealing girl shot at the police,” the officer responded.
@JasonRileyWDRB
"An investigator with Cameron's office relayed an interview with a neighbor who lived directly next door to Taylor who said he 'knows for a fact nobody announced' themselves as police."
"She receives his packages and held his money," Mattingly told grand jury of Taylor
Again, LMPD officers were repeatedly told there was nothing of interest being sent to Taylor's home. No money, drugs or packages of interest were found in Taylor's apartment.
@robferdman
At one point on the first day of grand jury deliberations, one of the prosecutors laments to the jurors that they can’t play all the body cam videos because of time. A juror responds loudly: “We got time!”
@WFPLNews
Grand jury recordings update: According to testimony, there was no body camera footage until after the incident. Tony James, an LMPD officer who was photographed wearing a body camera after
#BreonnaTaylor was shot and killed, thought he had activated it but he hadn’t.
Though other officers weren’t wearing body cameras, his failure to activate his would constitute a violation of LMPD’s rules.