Quick Glance: Authorities say a Louisville bank employee used a legally purchased AR-15 to target coworkers.
- Authorities said Tuesday that the gunman who killed five people and injured eight others in a shooting in downtown Louisville on Monday was carrying out a workplace attack with an AR-15 rifle he legally purchased six days earlier.
- Morgan McGarvey (D-Ky.) stated during the press conference.
- Many people were in the bank building at the time of the shooting, and authorities said the quick police response saved their lives.
- McGarvey described calling Louisville police, who informed him that Barrick's husband, Joshua, was not among the survivors.
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#LouisvilleShooting | Five people have died and at least eight hospitalised following the latest incident of a mass shooting in the United States
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The DOJ launched a two year investigation into the Louisville PD to find out something every black person already knew.
U.S. Department of Justice officials are expected to announce sweeping reforms to Louisville Metro Police on Wednesday ... Show more
One of the packages seized by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in Louisville contained 2,265 fake IDs.
Show moreA Court of Appeals decision reinstating a GOP candidate’s eligibility for a House seat in Louisville referenced Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s ... Show more
Quick Glance: Breonna Taylor search warrant: officer admits to providing fake information
- Kelly Goodlett, a former Louisville Police detective, is accused of lying in an affidavit and attempting to conceal her acts.
- Kelly Goodlett, a former Louisville Metro Police Department detective, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a federal conspiracy charge, admitting that she falsified the affidavit that granted officers a search warrant to enter Breonna Taylor's home in a botched March 2020 raid that resulted in her death.
- According to federal authorities, Goodlett willfully included false information in an affidavit given to a judge to authorize detectives to search Taylor's house in connection with an investigation involving her ex-boyfriend.
Quick Glance: Feds prosecute four Louisville police officers in the shooting of Breonna Taylor.
- LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The Justice Department accused four Louisville police officers involved in the deadly raid on Breonna Taylor's house on Thursday with civil-rights violations, including a former detective who was fired for lying on the search warrant that led to her death.
- "Breonna Taylor should be alive today," Garland opined.
- MORE ON THE CASE: What was the purpose of the police presence at Breonna Taylor's home?
- An investigation summary is as follows:
- Members of the PBI Unit, according to Garland, "falsified the affidavit used to obtain the search warrant of Ms. Taylor's home," which violated federal civil-rights law and "resulted in Ms. Taylor's death."
Quick Glance: Racism and police violence: four cops charged in the federal Breonna Taylor case
- Three of the four defendants are accused of obtaining a search warrant using false information, according to the US Attorney General.
- Taylor was shot and killed in her residence by police in March 2020.
- According to the previous inquiry, police officers armed with a search warrant entered Taylor's flat late at night after no one answered the door.
- Taylor's friend allegedly opened fire inside the apartment, injuring one of the policemen in the leg.
Gov. Andy Beshear, during a visit with mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg in Louisville, condemned the Supreme Court's June 24 abortion-related ruling ... Show more
Areas with more poverty have drastically lower rents than those with higher incomes, creating a wide gap in median costs between different parts of the ... Show more
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