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Former Louisville officer guilty of violating Breonna Taylor’s civil rights
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Former Louisville officer guilty of violating Breonna Taylor’s civil rights

A jury on Friday found former Louisville police officer Brett Hankison guilty of violating Breonna Taylor’s civil rights during a deadly botched police raid. federal lawsuit against him.

The guilty verdict came hours after a jury acquitted Hankison for a second time on charges that he violated the civil rights of three of Taylor’s neighbors who lived in an adjacent apartment and were also shot during the raid. After the partial verdict was announced, jurors who were deadlocked in the case specifically involving Taylor were instructed by the judge to continue deliberating.

The jury returned a guilty verdict in the matter shortly before 9:30 p.m., according to the Louisville ABC affiliate. WHY.

Taylor’s family and friends hugged and cheered after leaving court late Friday night.

Speaking to reporters after the verdict, Taylor’s mother, Tamika Palmer, thanked prosecutors and jurors. “They were waylaid,” Palmer said of prosecutors who retried the case after Hankison’s first federal trial. resulted in a mistrial Last year, the jury failed to reach a unanimous verdict after deliberating for several days.

As negotiations this time dragged on late into the evening on Friday, Palmer said he began to feel defeated. “The later it got, the harder it got, and I’m happy to be on the other side,” he said.

“Now I want people to keep saying Breonna Taylor’s name,” her mother said.

Taylor was fatally shot during the March 2020 raid. The three officers fired dozens of shots after the boyfriend fired one shot at them and then fired at one of the officers.

Prosecutors said Hankison fired 10 shots at Taylor’s sliding glass door and window, which were covered with blinds and curtains. Many of the bullets went into Taylor’s neighbor’s apartment, where three people were present at the time. None of the 10 bullets hit anyone.

MORE: Mistrial declared in federal case against former Louisville police officer over Breonna Taylor raid

Prosecutors argued Hankison’s use of force was unjustified, endangered people and violated the civil rights of Taylor and three neighbors. The indictment alleged that Hankison deprived Taylor of the right to be free from unreasonable seizures and deprived his neighbors of the right to be deprived of liberty without due process.

Multiple witnesses, including Louisville’s current police chief, testified during the trial that the former officer violated Louisville police policy that requires officers to identify a target before shooting, the Associated Press reported.

The defense argued during the trial that Hankison participated in a poorly planned raid and fired his gun after believing someone was advancing on other officers, the AP reported.

The charges carry a maximum sentence of life imprisonment if convicted.

PHOTO: In this March 2, 2022 file photo, former Louisville Police officer Brett Hankison examines a document while answering questions from the prosecutor's office in Louisville, Ky. (Timothy D. Easley, Pool via AP, FILE)PHOTO: In this March 2, 2022 file photo, former Louisville Police officer Brett Hankison examines a document while answering questions from the prosecutor's office in Louisville, Ky. (Timothy D. Easley, Pool via AP, FILE)

PHOTO: In this March 2, 2022 file photo, former Louisville Police officer Brett Hankison examines a document while answering questions from the prosecutor’s office in Louisville, Ky. (Timothy D. Easley, Pool via AP, FILE)

Plainclothes officers broke down the door of Taylor’s home while serving a search warrant for Taylor’s ex-boyfriend, who they claimed was dealing drugs. She was not at home, but her current boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, thought someone was breaking into the house and fired a single shot from his gun, hitting one of the officers in the leg. All three officers returned fire, firing 32 bullets into the apartment.

The original indictment also alleged that Hankison violated Walker’s civil rights, but Walker was removed from the charge at the beginning of the retrial.

The retrial was the first mistrial for Hankison, as well as the third following a 2022 state trial in which he was acquitted of multiple wanton endangerment charges.

MORE: Jury finds former police officer Brett Hankison not guilty on all charges in shooting during Breonna Taylor raid

As in his previous trials, Hankison took the stand during the retrial and became emotional at times during his two days of testimony. WHYABC’s affiliate in Louisville is monitoring the case from the courtroom.

Hankison told jurors he was “trying to survive (and) try to keep my partners alive,” according to WHAS.

Hankison insisted that “the only person my bullet could hit was the shooter” and said the risk of hitting anyone other than the threat was “zero.” WHY.

PHOTO: In this Sept. 24, 2020, file photo, Breonna Taylor is seen inside a broken photo frame at a makeshift memorial for her in Louisville, Kentucky. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images, FILE)PHOTO: In this Sept. 24, 2020, file photo, Breonna Taylor is seen inside a broken photo frame at a makeshift memorial for her in Louisville, Kentucky. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images, FILE)

PHOTO: In this Sept. 24, 2020, file photo, Breonna Taylor is seen inside a broken photo frame at a makeshift memorial for her in Louisville, Kentucky. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images, FILE)

According to the AP, he said he fired a gun that night for the first time in his nearly 20 years of police work.

Hankison was fired from the Louisville Metro Police Department for violating the department’s procedures by “unintentionally and blindly” firing into the apartment.

No charges were filed against the other two police officers who participated in the raid. Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron called Taylor’s death a “tragedy” but said the two officers were justified in using force after Walker opened fire.

Former Louisville officer guilty of violating Breonna Taylor’s civil rights originally appeared abcnews.go.com