Ballistics AG Cameron’s claim does not support Brenno Taylor’s boyfriend shot officer


According to a report, a ballistic report from Kentucky State Police has dismissed claims that Bravo shot Taylor’s boyfriend on the cops.

Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron said the two officers justified wielding their weapons because Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walt Kare, fired a shot at them.

The KSP report said that “due to the limited traces of comparable value,” a 9-mm bullet that hit the sergeant and went off. John Mattingley was not eliminated from Walker’s gun as “fired or fired.”

Cameron said Taylor was shot six times on the night of his death, but only one was fatal in the shooting. Sergeant. John Mattingley entered the house after the door broke down and was shot once in the leg by Taylor’s boyfriend Waker Kar. Waker said he did not know the police were at the door, and he “fired a warning shot” thinking he was an intruder. After Vaker fired, Mattingley, Hankinson and a third officer, Miles Cosgrove, fired in a total of 32 shots fired by police.

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Cameron said the deadly bullet was fired by Cosgrove, but added that Cosgrove and Mattingley were justified in using force because they had been shot first. Cameron said state law “prohibits us from seeking charges of Brano Taylor’s death.” Cameron also said there was no conclusive evidence that any of Hankson’s 10 shots hit Taylor inside his home. But Hankinson was charged with endangering the lives of three people who went to another house with insiders for the shooting.

A grand jury on Wednesday charged an officer, Brett Hankison, with three horrific dangers for firing a shot, which went to another home with people inside. But the judges did not convict any officer on charges directly related to Taylor’s death.