美国司法部寻求永久撤销对布伦娜·泰勒案件中两名前警察的指控。
DOJ Moves For Permanent Dismissal Of Charges Against 2 Ex-Cops In Breonna Taylor Case

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/doj-moves-permanent-dismissal-charges-against-2-ex-cops-breonna-taylor-case

美国司法部正在寻求永久撤销对前路易斯维尔警察乔舒亚·杰恩斯和凯尔·米尼的联邦指控,这些指控源于2020年备受争议的突袭行动,该行动导致布雷奥娜·泰勒死亡。这两名警官被指控伪造了授权无敲门突袭的搜查令。 检察官现在认为撤销指控“符合司法公正的利益”,此前一位联邦法官已经驳回了更严重的指控。这两名警官及其法律团队都对司法部的动议表示欣慰。 然而,泰勒的母亲塔米卡·帕尔默表达了强烈失望,批评了这一决定。此案与乔治·弗洛伊德之死一同引起全国关注,引发了广泛抗议。 前警官布雷特·汉基森因在突袭期间鲁莽开枪而服刑,但其他参与突袭的警官因其行为未受到指控。路易斯维尔市此前已与泰勒家人达成1200万美元的和解。 法官对司法部撤诉动议的裁决仍在等待中。

相关文章

原文

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times,

The Department of Justice (DOJ) is looking to permanently dismiss the cases against two former Louisville police officers connected to the night Breonna Taylor was killed six years ago, according to court documents filed Friday.

Former Detective Joshua Jaynes and former Sgt. Kyle Meany were accused of falsifying a warrant that led to the botched police raid on her apartment the night she died. Federal prosecutors said in the motion that their charges should be “dismissed in the interest of justice.”

Lawyers for Jaynes, Travis Lock, told The Epoch Times in an email that he and Jaynes were “extremely happy” to learn of the DOJ motion.

Michael Denbow, lawyer for Meany, wrote in an email to The Epoch Times that “Kyle [Meany] is incredibly grateful for today’s filing.”

“He is looking forward to putting this matter behind him and moving forward with his life,” Denbow said.

Taylor’s mother, Tamika Palmer, criticized the motion by the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division to dismiss Jaynes’s and Meany’s cases.

“I am compelled to express my extreme disappointment in [President Donald] Trump and the Department of Justice,” Palmer said in a post on Facebook.

Following Taylor’s death, the city of Louisville paid a $12 million wrongful death settlement to her family.

Previously a federal judge dismissed the most serious charges—deprivation of rights with an enhancement of use of a dangerous weapon causing death—brought by the DOJ under President Joe Biden against Jaynes and Meany.

Taylor, 26 years old at the time of her death in March 2020, was shot by police while three officers served a no-knock warrant as part of a drug investigation into her boyfriend, suspect Kenneth Walker.

While carrying out the raid, Walker fired a shot that hit an officer in the leg. He later said he acted under the belief that intruders were breaking in.

Police returned fire, and several bullets struck and killed Taylor. Walker was not hit. Taylor’s death came a couple of months before the police custody death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, sparking nationwide protests and violent, damaging riots.

The only officer to serve prison time in connection to Taylor’s death, Brett Hankison, was sentenced to two years and nine months with three years of supervised release over blindly firing 10 rounds through Taylor’s windows the night of her death. None of his shots hit anyone.

At his sentencing in July 2025, Hankison apologized to Taylor’s friends and family, adding that he would have acted differently if he knew about the issues surrounding the no-knock warrant.

“I never would have fired my gun,” he said in the courtroom.

Prosecutors did not charge the other two officers, deeming their return fire justified.

It remains unclear when a judge could rule on the DOJ’s motion to dismiss with prejudice the charges against Jaynes and Meany.

*  *  * SALE ENDS IN 3 DAYS

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com