
Ex-officer who fatally shot Breonna Taylor hired as a deputy
He was fired from the police department in January 2021 for violating use-of-force procedures and failing to use a body camera during the raid on Taylor’s apartment.
Does anyone know or remember why there was a decision to not wear body cams during the Taylor search warrant matter? Did that ever come out?![]()
Ex-officer who fatally shot Breonna Taylor hired as a deputy
He was fired from the police department in January 2021 for violating use-of-force procedures and failing to use a body camera during the raid on Taylor’s apartment.www.wtoc.com
From the article:![]()
Ex-officer who fatally shot Breonna Taylor hired as a deputy
He was fired from the police department in January 2021 for violating use-of-force procedures and failing to use a body camera during the raid on Taylor’s apartment.www.wtoc.com
Oh yeah, makes sense, just recycle the bad ones- sort of like a bad doctor gets fired from one hospital but hired at another. great idea![]()
Ex-officer who fatally shot Breonna Taylor hired as a deputy
He was fired from the police department in January 2021 for violating use-of-force procedures and failing to use a body camera during the raid on Taylor’s apartment.www.wtoc.com
I don't know that Officer Cosgrove really did anything wrong. Just like Sgt Mattingly. They were handed a warrant to serve and carried it out. They were not part of the mess in obtaining the warrant, they were were told there was only one person in the home. Cosgrove was fired for political reasons, not legal ones.Oh yeah, makes sense, just recycle the bad ones- sort of like a bad doctor gets fired from one hospital but hired at another. great idea
Which is why I asked earlier if we know who made the decision to not use cams. Mattingly didn't use a body came and he wasn't fired. Were body cams required?Cosgrove was also fired for failing to use his body cam.
At Tuesday's hearing, LMPD attorney Brendan Daugherty said the department and Cosgrove's attorneys agreed that Cosgrove violated protocol by not activating his body camera during the raid on Taylor's apartment. However, that violation on its own is not a fireable offense.Which is why I asked earlier if we know who made the decision to not use cams. Mattingly didn't use a body came and he wasn't fired. Were body cams required?
I would argue that that article makes it abundantly clear that Cosgrove was fired for political purposes. The interim police chief does quite a word dance to avoid answering the relevant questions. And that, to me, speaks volumes.At Tuesday's hearing, LMPD attorney Brendan Daugherty said the department and Cosgrove's attorneys agreed that Cosgrove violated protocol by not activating his body camera during the raid on Taylor's apartment. However, that violation on its own is not a fireable offense.
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'You do not see, you do not shoot.' | Former interim police chief testifies at Myles Cosgrove's merit board hearing
Cosgrove was fired earlier this year for his role in Breonna Taylor's death in March 2020.www.whas11.com
I have to say, I find this article by WDRB to be very biased.![]()
Louisville police officer will testify he was 'shocked' by Brett Hankison's actions in Breonna Taylor raid
Hankison's defense attorney said he was trying to protect his fellow officers from an "execution."www.wdrb.com
The federal trial began today
Which parts did you feel seemed biased?I have to say, I find this article by WDRB to be very biased.
Hankerson's actions that night were atrocious and he should have been convicted in his previous trial. But this reporter either does not understand a lot of what happened or is just intentionally misconstruing it.
I sort of have some mixed feelings about this.![]()
After mistrial, feds move to retry ex-Louisville cop who fired shots in Breonna Taylor raid
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Federal prosecutors told a judge Wednesday they intend to retry former Louisville officer Brett Hankison after a jury deadlocked last month over charges he used excessive force the night Breonna Taylor was killed by police in 2020.www.wral.com
A federal judge has thrown out major felony charges against two former Louisville officers accused of falsifying a warrant that led police to Breonna Taylor's door before they fatally shot her.
U.S. District Judge Charles Simpson's ruling declared that the actions of Taylor's boyfriend, who fired a shot at police the night of the raid, were the legal cause of her death, not a bad warrant.