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  • The Courier Journal

    Key federal charges dropped against former LMPD officers behind Breonna Taylor warrant

    By Josh Wood, Rachel Smith and Lucas Aulbach, Louisville Courier Journal,

    6 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0pHRPm_0v75D4JQ00

    Two former Louisville Metro Police officers federally charged over using false information to secure a warrant that led to the botched 2020 raid that killed Breonna Taylor had their charges reduced by a federal judge on Thursday.

    In August 2022, the pair were federally charged in connection with preparing and approving a search warrant affidavit while, investigators allege, knowing the affidavit contained false and misleading statements, omitted key facts and was not supported by probable cause.

    U.S. District Court Senior Judge Charles Simpson III dismissed felony deprivation of rights under the color of law charges against former detective Joshua Jaynes and former Sgt. Kyle Meany in an order Thursday.

    While the original indictment stated the offense involved the use of a dangerous weapon and resulted in Taylor’s death, which would have bumped up the potential penalty to life in prison, Simpson ruled that part of the indictment be stricken.

    Now, if convicted of that count, Meany and Jaynes stand to be sentenced to no more than a year in prison.

    Jaynes is still charged with conspiring with another detective to cover up the false warrant and of falsifying a document to mislead investigators.

    Meany is still charged with making a false statement to FBI investigators.

    Jaynes was fired from LMPD in January 2021 after an internal investigation determined he violated LMPD’s truthfulness and search warrant preparation policies ; Meany was fired by former LMPD Chief Erika Shields in August 2022 after he was federally indicted .

    Louisville lawyer Thomas Clay, who represents Joshua Jaynes, told The Courier Journal his client was happy with the outcome.

    “This dismissal places the burden on the United States as to how to proceed on the dismissal of this order,” Clay said.

    The attorney added that the Department of Justice was waiting for the conclusion of the trial of Brett Hankison , currently slated for October, to set a date for the trial of Jaynes and Meany.

    Brian Butler, an attorney representing Kyle Meany, said “we are very pleased by the court’s ruling.”

    Details on the judge's decision

    The decision by Kenneth Walker, Taylor’s then-boyfriend who was at her apartment the night of the raid, to fire at police who had entered her residence is at the center of the dismissed charges.

    Simpson found Walker’s decision to shoot at police was the catalyst behind Taylor’s death, superseding officers’ entry on a warrant that prosecutors have alleged included false information. Walker fired first that night, and LMPD officers fired 32 shots in response, with several hitting and killing Taylor.

    Prosecutors are required to prove officers’ entry was the actual cause of Taylor’s death, as well as the proximate cause, meaning her death was “the natural and probable consequence” of what happened. Attorneys for Jaynes and Meany argued Walker’s decision to fire at officers intervened in the natural course of events and should relieve them of “criminal responsibility for Taylor’s death.”

    Simpson agreed. Walker’s decision to shoot at officers — one, former Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly, was injured — was a ”superseding cause” that became the “legal cause of her death,” even if he didn’t know the people who’d entered the apartment were police.

    Additionally, while prosecutors alleged the fatal shooting “involved the use of a dangerous weapon and resulted in Taylor’s death,” the judge ruled officers were using their weapons to return fire against Walker, not to “facilitate, further, or aid in conducting the search itself.”

    While prosecutors argued police had their guns drawn upon entry, the judge said that purpose was “self-protection, not facilitating the allegedly unlawful search.”

    Where do other cases related to the Taylor raid stand?

    Meany and Jaynes were among four current and former offices federally charged on Aug. 4, 2022, in connection to the Breonna Taylor raid.

    One of those officers, detective Kelly Goodlett, pleaded guilty to lying on the warrant. She hast not yet been sentenced.

    Hankison, who fired 10 shots into Taylor’s apartment during the March 13, 2020 raid, was federally charged with violating the civil rights of of Taylor , Walker and three neighbors by using excessive force. When a jury could not come to a unanimous decision in November, the judge declared a mistrial .

    A retrial is anticipated later this year.

    Neither of the other two officers who fired their weapons during the raid on Taylor’s apartment were charged with any crimes.

    Reach reporter Josh Wood at jwood@courier-journal.com or on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @JWoodJourno . Reach reporter Rachel Smith at rksmith@courier-journal.com or on X at @RachelSmithNews . Reach reporter Lucas Aulbach at laulbach@courier-journal.com or on X at @LucasAulbach .

    This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Key federal charges dropped against former LMPD officers behind Breonna Taylor warrant

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