Absolutely. It could have been handled better about a 1/2 dozen different ways. Too much TV, too many movies, too much "wanna be the star of my own movie", and way too much uneducated testosterone. Nothing's changed. Maybe the quantity of media feeding the loose screw that makes these kids act like they do. Its on both sides. Hoods and cops. They all act it out in real life. Weird, but predictable, all things considered.
The search warrant was to gather evidence NOT to wait for the subjects to leave the house. Search warrants are meant to surprise so the subjects cannot destroy or hide evidence.
The fact remains, if Breonna Taylor's boyfriend did not shoot at the police officers first, and one of them got hit, then, they did not have to return fire. Breonna Taylor was unfortunately, collateral damage to her boyfriend's stupidity? People need to be held responsible for their actions yet, the police officers in this case portrayed as the bad guys for defending themselves? I do not see how you charge one of the police officers while, saying the other 2 police officers were cleared for defending themselves? That is sheer utter lunacy. All of their lives were at risk at that point that shot was fired thru the door. The DA who was black filed charges because it was the popular desire of the BLM thugs and he had to give in to their desires. Even that is not going to be enough and riots coming after.
https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/louis...cle_f25bbc06-96e4-11ea-9371-97b341bd2866.html Louisville postal inspector: No ‘packages of interest’ at slain EMT Breonna Taylor’s home LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) – A U.S. postal inspector in Louisville said Metro police did not use his office to verify that a drug suspect was receiving packages at Breonna Taylor's apartment, one of the factors listed in officers' request for a "no-knock" warrant for her home. But Tony Gooden said a different law enforcement agency asked his office in January to investigate whether Taylor's home was receiving any potentially suspicious mail. After looking into the request, he said, the local office concluded that it wasn't. "There's no packages of interest going there," he said in an interview after WDRB News contacted him Friday. Louisville Metro Police shot and killed Taylor, an emergency room tech and former EMT, during an early morning raid March 13. The shooting of Taylor, a black woman, has drawn national scrutiny and calls for an independent probe. Gooden's disclosure raises new questions about the Louisville police department's justification for a warrant that allowed officers to enter the Springfield Drive apartment without knocking or identifying themselves — and why her home was even targeted. It is "possible" that Louisville police asked a mail inspector from another jurisdiction of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service for help, Gooden said, but he said his office almost surely would have been notified of an outside agent's involvement. That didn't happen, he said. If a postal inspector from another agency did review packages at Taylor's apartment without notifying him, it would be innappropriate.