Breonna Taylor: Louisville to ban no-knock warrants after police shooting

  • 2020-06-12 14:02:52
A city council in the US state of Kentucky has voted to ban no-knock warrants, passing a law named in honour of a woman who was shot dead by police. Breonna Taylor, 26, was shot eight times when officers entered her apartment in Louisville on 13 March. They were executing a no-knock search warrant as part of a drugs investigation. A no-knock warrant is a search warrant approved by a judge that permits police to enter a home without permission. Inside, the officers exchanged fire with Ms Taylor's partner, but no drugs were found. The exact events are disputed, as police say that despite the warrant, they did knock before raiding her address using a battering ram. Ms Taylor's family and a neighbour have disputed this. On Thursday, Louisville's city council voted unanimously, 26-0, in favour of banning the controversial warrants. The ordinance, symbolically named "Breonna's Law", was put to a vote after calls for police reform at recent protests in the city and nationwide. "I'm just going to say, Breonna, that's all she wanted to do was save lives, so with this law she will continue to get to do that," Ms Taylor's mother, Tamika Palmer, said of her daughter, who was an emergency medical technician. "She would be so happy." The legislation also requires Louisville Metro Police Department officers to wear body cameras while carrying out search warrants. The cameras must be activated at least five minutes before the warrant is executed, the law says. Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer said he would sign the ban into law "as soon as it hits my desk". "I suspended use of these warrants indefinitely last month, and wholeheartedly agree with [the] council that the risk to residents and officers with this kind of search outweigh any benefit," Mr Fischer tweeted. Similar legislation that would ban the use of no-knock warrants nationwide was tabled by Republican Senator for Kentucky, Rand Paul, on Thursday. No-knock warrants are usually used for drugs raids by US police forces. Taylor's killing has been propelled into the spotlight again since the death of unarmed African-American man George Floyd, who died in police custody in Minneapolis, Minnesota in May. Activists are calling on people to "Say Her Name" as part of a movement to remember black women who have not attracted the same attention as other cases. Last week, when Ms Taylor would have turned 27, mourners gathered for a vigil in Louisville and people shared messages on social media, writing, "you should have been here to celebrate". Benjamin Crump, a lawyer for Ms Taylor's family, thanked "every supporter, every protester, every young activist" who said her name after the law was passed on Thursday.

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