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Breonna Taylor, aged 26, was an African-American medical worker who was killed on March 13, 2020, after police officers from Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) forced entry into her home. Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired a warning shot, mistaking the police for intruders, and wounded officer Jonathan Mattingly.
In March 1998, Brett Morgan was convicted of the first-degree murder of Louise Ellis and was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility for parole for 25 years. [28] [29] He died in prison due to hepatitis C two months into his sentence. [28] [4] Police said that Morgan was a suspect of two unsolved murders in Alberta in the 1970s. [29] [30]
Tamika Palmer, the mother of Breonna Taylor, said she was "grateful" after a federal jury found a former police officer guilty of violating her daughter's civil rights during a botched police raid ...
David Lyttle and Brett Hall had been friends for 30 years. In October 2009, Brett Hall was released from prison after serving five years for selling methamphetamine. In 2010, he purchased a section in Pitangi north of Whanganui and lived in a caravan. Although he was still on parole, Hall was suspected of secretly dealing drugs at the property.
Gender bias led to a Central Valley mother being convicted of murder in the 2018 killing of her infant son, ... Like Collins, who was in her late 20s when her son was killed, many abuse victims ...
Prior to Carly Gregg's conviction for fatally shooting her mother and attempting to kill her stepfather, a child psychiatrist testified during her trial about the then-14-year-old's state of mind ...
Breonna Taylor (June 5, 1993 – March 13, 2020) was an African-American woman who was shot and killed while unarmed in her Louisville, Kentucky home by three police officers who entered under the auspices of a "no-knock" search warrant.
Charles Whitman killed his mother and wife before going on his killing spree at the University of Texas at Austin that killed 14 people and wounded 31 others, as part of a shooting rampage from the observation deck of the university's 32-story administrative building on August 1, 1966. He was eventually shot and killed by Austin police.