Louisville anti-racism protests resume amid tensions over Breonna Taylor ruling

The grand jury decision, announced by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, was immediately denounced by civil rights advocates as the latest miscarriage of justice in a U.S. law enforcement system corrupted by racial inequity. Cameron said there was "no conclusive" evidence that any of the 10 shots fired by former Detective Brett Hankison, the officer indicted on wanton endangerment charges, ever struck Taylor.


Reuters | Updated: 25-09-2020 06:27 IST | Created: 25-09-2020 06:27 IST
Louisville anti-racism protests resume amid tensions over Breonna Taylor ruling
  • Country:
  • United States

A second night of anti-racism rallies got off to a peaceful but tense start in Louisville, Kentucky, on Thursday a day after two policemen were shot during protests sparked by a grand jury decision not to bring homicide charges against officers involved in the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor. Louisville police chief Robert Schroeder, his department aided in keeping order by state police and Kentucky National Guard troops, said he expected protests to continue for several days, and a nighttime curfew was extended through the weekend.

The two police officers shot and wounded on Wednesday were expected to recover, he said, and a suspect was taken into custody, one of 127 people arrested during the demonstrations, most for curfew violations or disobeying failure-to-disperse orders. "For all of us it is a very tense and emotional time," Schroeder told a news conference on Thursday.

Hundreds of demonstrators returned to the streets of Kentucky's largest city Thursday evening, many with fists raised in the air as they chanted Taylor's name and "No justice, no peace," while marching past a National Guard checkpoint into downtown. After milling about in Jefferson Square Park, a gathering point for the protesters in the heart of the city, the growing crowd marched peacefully along the city's Ohio River waterfront. Law enforcement seemed to keep a lower profile than they did the previous night.

The protests began Wednesday just after the grand jury decided that none of the three white officers who collectively fired 32 gunshots as they stormed Taylor's apartment would be charged with causing her death. One of the officers was indicted on charges of endangering Taylor's neighbors with several stray bullets he fired into an adjacent apartment during the ill-fated March 13 raid, carried out as part of a narcotics investigation. The other two officers were not charged at all.

Taylor, 26, a Black emergency medical technician and aspiring nurse, was struck by six bullets moments after she and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, were roused from bed in the commotion of the raid. Walker exchanged gunfire with the police. The grand jury decision, announced by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, was immediately denounced by civil rights advocates as the latest miscarriage of justice in a U.S. law enforcement system corrupted by racial inequity.

Cameron said there was "no conclusive" evidence that any of the 10 shots fired by former Detective Brett Hankison, the officer indicted on wanton endangerment charges, ever struck Taylor. His two colleagues, Sergeant Jonathan Mattingly and Detective Myles Cosgrove, used justified force under Kentucky law because they were returning fire - a combined total of 22 rounds - after Walker shot at them first, wounding Mattingly in the thigh, according to Cameron.

Walker has said he fired a warning shot because he feared a criminal intrusion and did not hear police identify themselves. RIPPLE EFFECTS

Protests in Louisville on Wednesday turned violent around nightfall as police in riot gear ordered demonstrators to clear the streets after several fires were set in trash cans near a downtown park and outside the city's Hall of Justice. A Reuters journalist heard several gunshots ring out, and members of the crowd scurried for cover. A suspect in the officer shooting was arrested a short time later and found carrying a handgun, according to an arrest report.

Larynzo Johnson, 26, was charged with two counts of assault in the first degree and 14 counts of wanton endangerment. His first hearing was set for Friday. Police said several businesses were vandalized or looted during the night, but the demonstrations were otherwise mostly peaceful.

Protests also flared on Wednesday in New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Washington, Oakland, Philadelphia, Denver and Portland, Oregon, Seattle and Buffalo, New York. The demonstrations were the latest in a wave to grip the country over excessive police force and racial injustice in the months following the May 25 death of George Floyd, a Black man arrested for a non-violent offense, when a white Minneapolis officer knelt on his neck.

In addition to largely orderly anti-racism protesters, the demonstrations have drawn a volatile mix of armed, right-wing militias and anarchists. On Thursday evening, a throng of protesters was seen by a Reuters journalist confronting a group of about 15 armed individuals dressed in military-style gear who identified themselves as members of the Oath Keepers, an organization associated with the militia movement.

But what began as a potentially incendiary standoff was diffused when protest organizers persuaded demonstrators in their group to leave peacefully. Two of the Oath Keepers, one of them a Black man, told WAVE-TV they were in town as volunteers to protect local property. Taylor's death initially drew little national attention but was thrust into prominence after Floyd's death and with the help of celebrities such as Hollywood stars and basketball great LeBron James. Demonstrations under the banner "Say her name!" have been held in Louisville for months.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Give Feedback