Louisville officers connected to Breonna Taylor's death could be fired - Action News
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Louisville officers connected to Breonna Taylor's death could be fired

Louisville, Ky., police have taken steps that could result in the firing of two officers connected to Breonna Taylor's death one who sought the no-knock search warrant that led detectives to her apartment and another found to have opened fire.

One of the two was found to have opened fire in the 26-year-old's apartment

Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old African-American emergency medical technician, was shot and killed in her bed by plain-clothes police officers in Louisville, Ky., on March 13. (Submitted by Bianca Austun)

Louisville, Ky., police have taken steps that could result in the firing of two officers connected to Breonna Taylor's death one who sought the no-knock search warrant that led detectives to her apartment and another found to have opened fire.

Det.Joshua Jaynes received a pre-termination letter, media outlets reported Tuesday. It came after a professional standards unit investigation found he had violated department procedures for preparation of a search warrant and truthfulness, his lawyersaid.

Det.Myles Cosgrove also received a pre-termination letter, media outlets later reported, citing his lawyer, Jarrod Beck. Kentucky's attorney general has said it was Cosgrove who appeared to have fired the fatal shot at Taylor, according to ballistics tests.

The shooting death of the 26-year-old Black woman in her home sparked months of protests in Louisville alongside national protests over racial injustice and police misconduct.

Jaynes has a hearing with interim police chief Yvette Gentry and her staff on Thursday.

"Detective Jaynes and I will show up for the pre-termination hearing to try to convince acting chief Gentry that this action is unwarranted," lawyerThomas Clay told the Courier Journal. "Jaynes did nothing wrong."

Protesters in Denver march against racial injustice and for Black women on Sept. 26 following the grand jury decision in Louisville's Breonna Taylor case. (Kevin Mohatt/Reuters)

Jaynes was not present during the shooting at Taylor's apartment in Louisville. About 12 hours earlier, he secured a warrant with a "no-knock" clause from a judge.

In Jaynes's pre-termination letter, Gentry said, the officer committed "extreme violations of our policies, which endangered others."

"Your actions have brought discredit upon yourself and the department," she wrote. "Your conduct has severely damaged the image our department has established within our community."

Officers were serving a narcotics warrant on March 13 when they shot Taylor, but no drugs or cash were found in her home. Taylor was an emergency medical worker who had settled in for the night when police busted through her door.

Former officer Brett Hankison was charged by a grand jury with wanton endangerment, a low-level felony, for firing into an adjacent apartment where people were present.

The two officers who shot Taylor, according to ballistics evidence, were not charged by the grand jury. One of those officers was shot by Taylor's boyfriend during the raid and returned fire. Taylor's boyfriend said he thought an intruder was breaking into her apartment.