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Police Major Who Oversaw Taylor Drug Raid Unit Investigated

FILE - In this Sept. 25, 2020, file photo, Black Lives Matter protesters march in Louisville. Hours of material in the grand jury proceedings for Taylors fatal shooting by police have been made public on Friday, Oct. 2. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 25, 2020, file photo, Black Lives Matter protesters march in Louisville. Hours of material in the grand jury proceedings for Taylors fatal shooting by police have been made public on Friday, Oct. 2. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File)

A Louisville Police major who oversaw the unit that sent officers to Breonna Taylor's home the night she was fatally shot is the subject of an internal police investigation.

LOUISVILLE, Ky.: A Louisville Police major who oversaw the unit that sent officers to Breonna Taylor’s home the night she was fatally shot is the subject of an internal police investigation.

The departments Professional Standards Unit opened an investigation this week into Maj. Kimberly Burbrink, the commander of the Criminal Interdiction Division, the Courier Journal reported. Burbrink has been placed on administrative reassignment.

The department declined to answer questions about the probe of Burbrink, which was initiated at the request of acting Chief Yvette Gentry.

The newspaper reported that the department’s investigative file released this month included a report accusing Burbrink of pressuring and cross-examining investigators who were probing the shooting.

Burbrink was allowed to attend a May video call to update department leaders about the Taylor case, even though investigators voiced concern about her presence on the call.

The report said when investigators pointed out inconsistencies in Brett Hankisons statement to investigators after the Taylor shooting, Burbrink took opposition with investigators and requested investigators to list the inconsistencies.”

Hankison, a former Louisville police detective, was fired in June and faces three counts of wanton endangerment for shooting into Taylors neighbor’s apartment the night of the narcotics raid. Taylor was fatally shot March 13 by Louisville officers carrying a narcotics warrant based on the suspicion that an ex-boyfriend might have used her apartment to stash drugs or cash. None were found in her home.

Gentry, who took office earlier this month, has said she wants the department’s internal probe of the Taylor shooting to include everything from the beginning, as it relates to the investigation and the warrant itself, through the supervision of it.

I think thats the best way to do it, to tell the story of what happened in this case and what we have learned from it and what were going to do going forward, Gentry said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor


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