
Sentencing hearing set for ex-Kentucky officer convicted in Breonna Taylor raid
Brett Hankison fired his weapon the night of the March 2020 botched drug raid. His shots didn't hit or injure anyone, but flew through Taylor's walls into a neighboring apartment.
The 26-year-old's death, along with the May 2020 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, sparked racial injustice protests nationwide that year.
Though the sentence could amount to several years, if U.S. District Judge Grady Jennings heeds the Justice Department's request, it would mean none of the Louisville police officers involved in the raid would face prison time.
Last week, the U.S. Justice Department recommended no prison time for Hankison, in an abrupt about-face by federal prosecutors that has angered critics after the department spent years prosecuting the former detective.
The Justice Department, which has changed leadership under President Donald Trump since Hankison's conviction, said in a sentencing memo last week that "there is no need for a prison sentence to protect the public' from Hankison. Federal prosecutors suggested time already served, which amounts to one day, and three years of supervised probation.
Prosecutors at his previous federal trials aggressively pursued a conviction against Hankison, 49, arguing that he blindly fired 10 shots into Taylor's windows without identifying a target. Taylor was shot in her hallway by two other officers after her boyfriend fired from inside the apartment, striking an officer in the leg. Neither of the other officers was charged in state or federal court after prosecutors deemed they were justified in returning fire into the apartment. Louisville police used a drug warrant to enter the apartment, but found no drugs or cash inside.
A separate jury deadlocked on federal charges against Hankison in 2023, and he was acquitted on state charges of wanton endangerment in 2022.
In their recent sentencing memo, federal prosecutors wrote that though Hankison's 'response in these fraught circumstances was unreasonable given the benefit of hindsight, that unreasonable response did not kill or wound Breonna Taylor, her boyfriend, her neighbors, defendant's fellow officers, or anyone else.'
Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who helped Taylor's family secure a $12 million wrongful death settlement against the city of Louisville, has called the Justice Department recommendation 'an insult to the life of Breonna Taylor and a blatant betrayal of the jury's decision.' He added in a social media post that it "sends the unmistakable message that white officers can violate the civil rights of Black Americans with near-total impunity.'
On Monday, the Louisville Metro Police Department arrested four people in front of the courthouse who it said were 'creating confrontation, kicking vehicles, or otherwise creating an unsafe environment.' Authorities didn't list the charges those arrested would face.
'We understand this case caused pain and damaged trust between our department and the community,' a police statement said. 'We particularly respect and value the 1st Amendment. However, what we saw today in front of the courthouse in the street was not safe, acceptable or legal.'
A U.S. Probation Office presentencing report said Hankison should face a range of 135 to 168 months imprisonment on the excessive force conviction, according to the memo. But federal prosecutors said multiple factors — including that Hankison's two other trials ended with no convictions — should greatly reduce the potential punishment.
The memorandum was submitted by Harmeet Dhillon, chief of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division and a Trump political appointee who in May moved to cancel settlements with Louisville and Minneapolis that had called for overhauling their police departments.
In the Taylor case, three other ex-Louisville police officers have been charged with crafting a falsified warrant, but have not gone to trial. None were at the scene when Taylor was shot.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
9 minutes ago
- USA Today
Trump pick Alina Habba is out\u00a0as interim US attorney for New Jersey
President Donald Trump's former lawyer Alina Habba was rejected as the state's top federal prosecutor. WASHINGTON – A panel of judges in the U.S. District Court in New Jersey declined to permanently appoint President Donald Trump's former lawyer, Alina Habba, to serve as the state's top federal prosecutor, according to an order from the court. Habba has been serving as New Jersey's interim U.S. attorney since her appointment by Trump in March, but was limited by law to 120 days in office unless the court agreed to keep her in place. The U.S. Senate has not yet acted on her formal nomination to the role, submitted by Trump this month. The court instead appointed the office's No. 2 attorney, Desiree Grace, the order said. More: Trump's team promised transparency on Epstein. Here's what they delivered. The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York last week declined to keep Trump's U.S. attorney pick John Sarcone in place after his 120-day term neared expiration. Sarcone managed to stay in the office after the Justice Department found a workaround by naming him as "special attorney to the attorney general," according to The New York Times. Habba's brief tenure as New Jersey's interim U.S. attorney included the filing of multiple legal actions against Democratic elected officials. Her office brought criminal charges against Democratic U.S. Representative LaMonica McIver, as she and other members of Congress and Newark's Democratic mayor, Ras Baraka, tried to visit an immigration detention center. The scene grew chaotic after immigration agents tried to arrest Baraka for trespassing, and McIver's elbows appeared to make brief contact with an immigration officer. Habba's office charged McIver with two counts of assaulting and impeding a law enforcement officer. McIver has pleaded not guilty. Habba's office did not follow Justice Department rules, which require prosecutors to seek permission from the Public Integrity Section before bringing criminal charges against a member of Congress for conduct related to their official duties. Habba's office also charged Baraka, but later dropped the case, prompting a federal magistrate judge to criticize her office for its handling of the matter. Prior to March, Habba had never worked as a prosecutor. She represented Trump in a variety of civil litigation, including a trial in which a jury found Trump liable for defaming writer E. Jean Carroll after she accused him of raping her in the mid-1990s in a department store dressing room. In 2023, a federal judge in Florida sanctioned Trump and Habba and ordered them to pay $1 million for filing a frivolous lawsuit, which alleged that Hillary Clinton and others conspired to damage Trump's reputation in the investigation into Trump's 2016 presidential campaign.


Politico
10 minutes ago
- Politico
Beto O'Rourke calls on Democrats to play hardball on redistricting
"Why the fuck are we responding and reacting to the other side instead of taking offense on these things?" the former Texas gubernatorial candidate said. Beto O'Rourke wants Democrats to play hardball on redistricting. | Tony Gutierrez/AP By Danny Nguyen 07/22/2025 04:07 PM EDT Former Rep. Beto O'Rourke of Texas added himself to a shortlist of Democrats pressuring California to carve out extra congressional districts for their party ahead of the midterms. The remarks, made at an event hosted by the left-leaning think tank Center for American Progress on Tuesday, came a day after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott started a special session to redistrict his state years earlier than it normally would, which could thwart Democrats' attempt to recapture power in Congress in 2026. It's part of an effort led by President Donald Trump to hold the slim Republican majority, but California Gov. Gavin Newsom has threatened to redistrict his state in a way that'd offset gains in Texas. 'Not only do I think he should do this, I don't think he should wait for Texas,' said O'Rourke, who is considering running for a Texas Senate seat in 2026. 'Why the fuck are we responding and reacting to the other side instead of taking offense on these things?'


Time Magazine
10 minutes ago
- Time Magazine
From the Grave, Jeffrey Epstein Shuts Down the House
This article is part of The D.C. Brief, TIME's politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox. There's no pretending otherwise: disgraced and deceased financier Jeffrey Epstein has hijacked Washington. Speaker Mike Johnson on Tuesday announced he was starting the August recess a few days early to avoid the chamber having to vote on whether Congress should force the Justice Department to publish everything it has on Epstein, who was accused of running a sex ring of minors for the rich and powerful. The move amounted to Johnson veering toward an emergency off-ramp to avoid a toxic topic that has crippled President Donald Trump, and by extension most Republicans in Congress. We are now in the second week of Trump trying and failing to get out from under Epstein's shadow. At the Capitol, disagreements about how to pursue justice for Epstein's alleged victims are erupting into screaming matches and quiet acrimony, and even some of Trump's ardent apologists are finding themselves in a circular text chain asking if the White House gets just how boxed-in the President has become. Ever since the Department of Justice and the FBI jointly released a memo on July 7 affirming that Epstein died by suicide in 2019 and that there is no 'incriminating client list' in the government's Epstein files, almost nothing else has been able to break through here. A revolt in the MAGAverse stalled votes in the House. The White House has been unable to reclaim control of the story, let alone take a victory lap on Trump's tax- and spending-cuts law. Donors are simultaneously titillated by the tabloid fodder and disgusted that the long-promised disclosures have not been produced. Trump and his allies have long fed the myth that Epstein's life and death alike were pieces of a coverup to protect powerful players. It became something of a cottage industry, up there with Hillary Clinton's emails and Joe Biden's mental acuity. Now, Trumpists are finding the shrapnel does not spare them when the expectations and the reality are not neatly aligned. Among more sober-minded Hill staffers, a variation of the same meme has become ubiquitous: you live by the sword, you die by the sword. House Rules came to a standstill on Monday as Republican troublemakers demanded Congress move to force the Justice Department to publish what it has on Epstein. Democrats were more than happy to join that push and it became clear that Leadership had lost its leash on a movement that Trump has tried for two weeks to shut down. Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of California have joined forces on a discharge petition to force transparency on Epstein's dossier, which would allow for a vote on the House floor over the objections of the GOP Leadership team. If that unlikely pair can cobble together 218 signatures on their petition, the measure could sidestep Johnson's veto. At the same time, a House Oversight subcommittee on Tuesday moved ahead with a motion from Republican Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee to subpoena Epstein co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell. Rather than keep playing with fire, Johnson sent everyone home. A hasty exit was seen as a better option than a slow-burning self-own. This is not the summer Trump and his sycophants had planned. Epstein has pulled focus from One Big Beautiful tax- and spending-cut package the President signed on July 4 replete with a military flyover. Yet increasingly, signs in the Capitol are of a party at war with its own members. Even Trump's Congressional allies have depleted their patience. 'I am tired of making history,' Johnson told reporters last week after holding open the vote on an ultimately successful cryptocurrency bill for a record nine hours as an Epstein sideshow invaded. 'I just want a normal Congress.' You're hardly alone, Mr. Speaker. But with Trump at the helm and increasingly backed into a corner by an Epstein saga that has split his typically lock-stepped Republican Party, it seems like the White House is turning to the oldies in an attempt to recapture the narrative. It is not working, and that means we once again are at the mercy of Trump's whims. Trump remains in open contempt of his base, which is peeved he promised a bombshell release of a celebrity client list of Epstein. He bemoaned that Jerome Powell was ever nominated to lead the nation's central bank, a position Trump himself put Powell in. He's even rewriting the recipe for Coke via social media posts, sending some suppliers racing to an unexpected sell-off. And, as this week began, he threatened Washington's football team and its new stadium if it didn't return to a former name that was ditched because it was demeaning to Native Americans. Oh, and for good measure Sunday evening, he posted a video showing Democrats saying no one is above the law before cutting to what appears to be an A.I.-created clip of federal agents arresting Barack Obama in the Oval Office, pushing the former President to the ground before hauling him to a prison. If Joe Biden were acting this way, there would be hearings. The House is on its way home, and Senators are all but done, too. That leaves Trump here in Washington without any prospects of legislative movement until September, a stretch that typically gives administrations time to regroup and plot a push ahead of the Oct. 1 start of the next federal fiscal year. But instead of setting up a spending plan and plotting how to finish out the year, the White House is facing unending questions about Trump and his friendship with Epstein, which has never been in dispute. As GOP lawmakers rush to their flights out of Reagan, many are harboring the same hope: that their districts are not as consumed by the Epstein scandal as Washington has been. For those working in Washington, little else has seemed to matter. Make sense of what matters in Washington. Sign up for the D.C. Brief newsletter.