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Jurors failed to reach a unanimous verdict on federal civil rights charges Thursday in the trial of a former Louisville police officer charged in the police raid that killed Breonna Taylor, prompting the judge to declare a mistrial.
Brett Hankison was charged with using excessive force that violated the rights of Taylor, her boyfriend and her next-door neighbors. Hankison fired 10 shots into the Black woman’s window and a glass door after officers came under fire during a flawed drug warrant search on March 13, 2020. Some of his shots flew into a neighboring apartment, but none of them struck anyone.
The 12-member, mostly white jury struggled fruitlessly to reach a verdict over several days. On Thursday afternoon, they sent a note to the judge saying they were at an impasse. U.S. District Judge Rebecca Grady Jennings urged them to keep trying, and they returned to deliberations.
FORMER KY OFFICER FACES SECOND CONVICTION ATTEMPT AFTER FIRING INTO BREONNA TAYLOR’S APARTMENT
BREONNA TAYLOR DEATH: FORMER LOUISVILLE DETECTIVE PLEADS GUILTY TO FALSIFYING AFFIDAVIT FOR RAID
The judge reported there were “elevated voices” coming from the jury room at times during deliberations, and court security officials had to visit the room. Jurors then told the judge Thursday they were deadlocked on both counts against Hankison, and could not come to a decision — prompting Jennings’ declaration of a mistrial.
The mistrial could result in a retrial of Hankison, but that would be determined by federal prosecutors at a later date.
Federal prosecutors didn’t immediately respond to an email afterward seeking comment.
Before the mistrial was declared, the lead federal prosecutor, Michael Songer, said in court that it would take “enormous resources … to retry this case.” Songer wanted the jury to keep deliberating.
Jennings said she believed the jury would not be able to reach a verdict. “I think the totality of the circumstances may be beyond repair in this case,” the judge said. “They have a disagreement that they cannot get past.”
Lonita Baker, an attorney for Taylor’s family, said afterward that Taylor’s mother, Tamika Palmer, was disappointed with the outcome but remained encouraged “because a mistrial is not an acquittal. And so we live another day to fight for justice for Breonna.”
Hankison, 47, was acquitted by a Kentucky jury last year on wanton endangerment charges. State prosecutors had alleged he illegally put Taylor’s neighbors in danger. Months after his acquittal last year, the U.S. Department of Justice brought the new charges against Hankison, along with separate charges against a group of other officers involved in crafting the warrant.
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT CHARGES 4 LOUISVILLE POLICE OFFICERS IN BREONNA TAYLOR INVESTIGATION
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said Taylor, a 26-year-old nursing student, “should be alive today” when he announced the federal charges in August 2022. The charges that Hankison faced carried a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Hankison was the only officer who fired his weapon the night of the Taylor raid to be criminally charged. Prosecutors determined that two other officers were justified in returning fire after one was shot in the leg.
Songer said Monday in the trial’s closing arguments that Hankison “was a law enforcement officer, but he was not above the law.” Songer argued that Hankison couldn’t see a target and knew firing blindly into the building was wrong.
Hankison’s attorney, Stewart Mathews, countered that he was acting quickly to help his fellow officers, who he believed were being “executed” by a gunman shooting from inside Taylor’s apartment. Taylor’s boyfriend had fired a single shot when police burst through the door. Her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, said he believed an intruder was barging in.
“If his perception was reasonable in the chaos of that moment, that was not criminal,” Mathews said.
The night of the raid, Hankison said he saw the shot from Taylor’s boyfriend in the hallway after her door was breached. He backed up and ran around the corner of the building, firing shots into the side of the apartment.
“I had to react,” he testified. “I had no choice.”
The single shot from Taylor’s boyfriend hit former police Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly, who dropped to the ground and fired six shots. Another officer, Myles Cosgrove, fired 16 rounds down the hallway, including the bullet that killed Taylor. Mattingly testified as a defense witness for Hankison in the federal trial, while Cosgrove was called to testify by prosecutors.
Cosgrove was fired by Louisville police along with Hankison. Mattingly retired.
BREONNA TAYLOR DEATH: LOUISVILLE POLICE DOCUMENTS SHINE LIGHT INTO INVESTIGATION DETAILS
Taylor’s death didn’t initially garner much attention, but after the death of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in May 2020 and the release of Taylor’s boyfriend’s 911 call, street protests over police brutality erupted around the country. Demonstrators in Louisville shouted Taylor’s name for months, along with high-profile Black celebrities like Oprah and Lebron James who demanded accountability for the police officers involved in the case.
Taylor’s case also cast intense scrutiny on so-called “no-knock” warrants, which were later banned in the city of Louisville. The warrants allow officers to enter a residence without warning, but in the Taylor raid officers said they knocked and announced their presence. The Louisville police chief at the time was subsequently fired because officers had not used body cameras the night of the raid.
Three other former officers involved in drawing up the warrant have been charged in a separate federal case. One of them, Kelly Goodlett, has pleaded guilty to helping falsify the warrant. She is expected to testify against former detective Joshua Jaynes and former Sgt. Kyle Meany in their trial next year.
Goodlett’s guilty plea remains the only criminal conviction of a police officer involved in the Taylor case.
MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan launched into a heated argument with Israeli official Mark Regev, an advisor to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, live on his show Thursday.
Hasan accused the Israeli government of killing children and of spreading propaganda and false information in the wake of the Israeli-Hamas war.
“They’re dead, Mark,” Hasan said, arguing that he has seen Palestinian children “with my own lying eyes being pulled from the rubble” from bombings. “But they’re also people your government has killed. You accept that, right? You’ve killed children? Or do you deny that?”
“No, I do not,” Regev responded. “I do not. I do not. First of all, you don’t know how those people died, those children.”
“Oh wow,” Hasan said in return.
Hasan also claimed that the Israeli government was peddling “disinformation” in the wake of the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks by Hamas on Israeli, American and other citizens.
“I agree with you. We shouldn’t blindly believe anything Hamas says,” he said. “But why should we believe what your government says either? Your military spokesman on Monday pointed to an Arabic document in the basement of a Gaza hospital and claimed it was a guardian list on which every terrorist writes his name. But that was false.”
DEMOCRATIC STAFFERS REVOLT OVER BOSSES IN CONGRESS ‘NOT LISTENING’ TO CONSTITUENTS ON ISRAEL: REPORT
In another tense exchange about casualty numbers, Hasan told Regev that he was avoiding his question on the issue.
“But you’re dodging my question, Mark,” Hasan said.
“I’m not sure that’s true,” Regev returned.
Hasan also pointed to a tweet from Israeli diplomat Ofir Gendelman who made a post “from a Lebanese short film” that the MSNBC host said was another example of “endless disinformation” from the Israeli government.
When Regev attempted to disagree with Hasan’s accusations, the two launched into another back-and-forth argument.
“Allow me to answer your question!” Regev told Hasan, raising his voice. “I’m answering your question directly, if you’ll allow me. We originally said in the atrocious Hamas attack on our people on Oct. 7, we had the number at 1,400 casualties, and now we’ve revised that down to 1,200 because we understood that we had overestimated: we made a mistake. There were actually bodies that were so badly burned, we thought they were ours. In the end, apparently they were Hamas terrorists.”
“When we make a mistake, we admit it,” Regev said.
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BESTSELLER | C# / .NET Developer (Full Stack / Backend Focused) | Aarhus, Denmark | Full Time | https://www.bestseller.com
We are looking for a forward-thinking developer to be vital part of the development process within the Digital Asset Management team in BESTSELLER TECH, contributing with strong C#/.NET and React competences to cover the full development stack.
You will become part of a self-organising and international high-performing agile team of 10 highly skilled cross-functional colleagues in our Digital Asset Management team, who are located across our locations Aarhus, Malaga and Kigali. The product vision of the team is to help BESTSELLER create great digital experiences with media sharing and marketing operations with a focus on digital assets (pictures, videos, 3D and more) and marketing automatization.
Tech Stack: C# (.NET 8), PostgreSQL, Kubernetes, Redpanda / Kafka, OpenTelemetry, Datadog, Azure, React (Typescript / Next.js)
To apply, or for more information: https://bestseller.com/careers/jobs/job-detail/12548
Mechanic Advisor | Remote | Latin America | Full-time | Senior Platform Engineer – Kubernetes, AWS – LATAM
Mechanic Advisor offers a market-leading CRM ( https://steercrm.com ) suite for automotive repair shops, complete with text messaging, email automation, direct mail integration, reputation management, appointment reminders, declined/recommended services, and many other features.
We have a large, modern infrastructure but there’s a lot of growth, scaling, automating, new solutions and improvements to do.
You must have extensive, senior-level experience with:
– Kubernetes (EKS preferred)
– AWS
– Terraform
– CI/CD (Github Actions preferred)
– a modern programming language (Go preferred)
– working fully remotely in a startup environment
You must be located in Latin America and be a confident communicator.
The successful candidate will join our small Platform Engineering Team and get to work with a diverse suite of technologies, wear many hats or other job post cliches. It’s a very busy environment and you need to be comfortable with autonomous work, changing priorities, ad-hoc requests and owning the delivery.
This is a fully remote, no travel required position. We have very few meetings, we’re light on process, with mostly flat hierarchy.
If you’re a truly senior Platform Engineer please email your resume to senior_platform_engineer___remote_cde699be7us@kelp.greenhouse.io
Keywords: Kubernetes, AWS, Terraform, GitHub Actions, Go
SEEKING WORK – Fullstack: React, Next, Node.js, Express – Open to hourly work (80€/h) or project-based (e.g. for MVPs) – fluent in German and English Please reach out via the email in my profile, if interested.
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