Member of the grand jury breaks silence on Breonna Taylor case, says they weren't given the chance to indict any officer for homicide

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A billboard featuring a picture of Breonna Taylor and calling for the arrest of police officers involved in her death is seen on August 11, 2020 in Louisville, Kentucky. Jon Cherry/Getty Images
  • A Kentucky judge on Tuesday ordered the release of grand jury records in the case of Breonna Taylor so the public can see if "elected officials are being honest."

  • Last month, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron claimed that grand jurors agreed with his office that officers "were justified" in opening fire on Taylor and her boyfriend during a no-knock raid on their apartment.

  • But one grand juror says they were never given the chance to indict any officer for homicide. And "the grand jury didn't agree that certain actions were justified."

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Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, announcing last month that no police officers would be charged with homicide for killing Breonna Taylor, claimed members of a grand jury agreed with him in finding that cops "were justified" in opening fire.

"My job is to present the facts to the grand jury and the grand jury then applies those facts to the law," Cameron explained, suggesting those facts informed the decision to indict only one officer on three counts of first-degree "wanton endangerment."

On Sept. 23, the grand jury in Louisville, Kentucky, indicted just one of the cops involved in the incident that led to Taylor's killing by police, indicting former officer Brett Hankinson on three counts of first-degree. "While there are six possible homicide charges under Kentucky law," Cameron said at the time, "these charges are not applicable to the facts before us," he said, asserting that "the grand jury agreed."

But one member of the grand jury says Cameron's version of events does not reflect what happened at all. In a statement issued Tuesday, an anonymous juror said they were never given the option to indict anyone for homicide. And, they added, the fact that the jury did not indict anyone on charges they were not presented with should not be read as an endorsement of any police officer's behavior.

"The grand jury didn't agree that certain actions were justified," the juror stated. "The grand jury was not given the opportunity to deliberate on those [other] charges and deliberated only on what was presented to them."

"I cannot speak for other jurors," they added, "but I can help the truth be told."

Now members of the public may get a chance to see for themselves exactly what such jurors were told. On Tuesday, a Kentucky judge ordered that grand jury records in the case be unsealed so that people might see if "publicly elected officials are being honest," as NBC News reported.

Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, was shot to death after Louisville police executed a no-knock warrant on the apartment where she was staying with her boyfriend, falsely believing that illegal drugs were being sold on the premises. Taylor's boyfriend opened fire on police, claiming they never announced they were law enforcement.

Attorneys for Taylor's family are calling for a "new independent prosecutor" to take over the case.

"We now know what we suspected: Attorney General Daniel Cameron took the decision out of the grand jury's hands," lawyers Ben Crump, Sam Aguiar, and Lonita Baker said in a statement on Tuesday. "It is a despicable miscarriage of justice that is disrespectful to the life of Breonna Taylor that AG Cameron white washed what his office presented to the grand jury."

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