Inside Brona Taylor’s apartment apartment and why the police live in it


More bullet holes are seen piercing the wall below the picture of the teal-colored flowers, and in one room the bullet shoots from the shoebox and the only shot of the sparkly sneaker.

In her closet, full of shoeboxes, another bullet came close to a snake’s skin-print boot. A Mickey Mouse bath toy set is suction-capped on a tile above a bathtub. The wall decal of the Eiffel Tower matches the bedspread and pillow in one bedroom. A colorful hanging piece on his front door reads, “Home.”

“And he just started saying, ‘Yeah, I think I’m almost ready. I have to get home first and then go from there.'” Tamika Palmer said.

Artwork on the front door of Breno Taylor's house.
Lewisville Metro Police were the focus of months of interrogation leading to the home after midnight on March 13 to execute a search warrant related to a drug investigation. The boat raid ended Taylor’s life and was thoroughly investigated and caught the public’s attention by nationwide protests and the “Say Her Name” movement.
None of the officers involved in the raid have been charged in connection with Taylor’s death. But former detective Brett Hankison was charged with three counts of endangering first-degree scarcity by firing indiscriminately into Taylor’s wanted apartment. He has not pleaded guilty.
The officer testified that Brano's Taylor was shot six or seven times by police before being fatally shot.

Taylor, 26, an EMT to ER technician and aspiring nurse, has no criminal history. Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron said no drugs, money or hay were found in Taylor’s apartment. With his office fees, the investigator told the grand jury that officers were not proceeding to execute a search warrant for Taylor’s apartment part.

Documents that were part of the Public Integrity Unit’s investigation were released Wednesday, revealing photos hours after Taylor’s murder and details of an alleged investigation into drug trafficking that eventually led police to his apartment apartment.
In the months leading up to Taylor’s murder, according to police records, a one-time boyfriend, in a police investigation involving Jamarcus Glover, brought her back to her home address several times, according to police records. Glover is the convicted felony that Lewisville Metro police believe helped supply drugs to the ring.
Police photograph of a letter from Jamanuks Glover, found at Taylor's home in Brenno.
A CNN investigation in July found that detectives linked Taylor’s home to Glover, who was suspected of supplying a local drug house. Police said Glover recently used Taylor’s residence as his “current home address,” according to an affidavit for a search warrant.
Taylor’s family has consistently denied that she was tied up with a drug ring and her mother spoke to Gust about how the allegations angered her.

“I’m fed up because I know how hard Brenna worked,” Palmer said. “I know it’s not about Breno’s life. Barrona couldn’t tell you where to buy a sleeping dime bag. She’s not the person on the news.”

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Police documents show that in 2017 Taylor locked Glover out of jail for two cases. Glover recently listed the address of Taylor’s apartment on Springfield Drive as his residence on September 20, 20. According to police documents, investigators obtained his bank records, where he used his apartment apartment as his mailing address.

Inside Taylor’s apartment on the day of her death, a police photo showed a mail addressed to Glover and Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Waker III, at the time. Vaker claimed he died the night of the shooting and fired a gun that he had obtained a license to carry. According to Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, the U.S. Attorney’s Office denied the allegations.

A letter from Glover at Taylor’s home reads in a police photograph: “From day one, I’ve kept it real and let you know I’m trying to make something with you.”

Two months before Taylor’s death

According to police documents summarizing the case, on Jan. 2, Lewisville Metro police installed a camera outside their home on Elliott Avenue, 20 minutes from Taylor’s home, to investigate drugs.

Within an hour of being placed, police say 15 to 20 vehicles were seen going home, which police records say is “an indicator of drug trafficking.” That day, officials say they saw Taylor’s registered car pull up in front of the house, and Glover exited from the passenger side.

Prior to the deadly raid, there were conflicting accounts of packages sent to Brenno Taylor's address, documents say.

Police records show Glover was arrested the next day on drug charges and Taylor was called out of jail at least 26 times.

Glover tells Taylor, “Just stay on standby so you can meet me. Love you.”

“Love you, too,” he said.

Taylor’s sister, Juaniah Palmer, previously told CNN that Taylor was not involved in Glover’s alleged drug operation operation and refused to bring that aspect of her life into her personal life.

“You can’t come to my house with any medicine,” he told Glover, quoting his sister. “My sister lives here (s) and I can’t hurt her with what you do.”

Police records show that on January 10, police found a GPS on a car. Installed a tracking device, which was operated by Glover during the investigation “after eliminating all traditional means of surveillance”. Police say they tracked down a car heading to Taylor’s apartment at least six times in January, and in one of the incidents, police took photos of Glover leaving her apartment on January 16. Police had a suspicious USPS package.

‘That girl killed you’

The photo of the crime scene released by the police has a picture of a white board with the title "No knock warrant" And "Knock and declare" Written at the top, and a number of addresses are listed, including Taylor.  Blurred part of this image to remove CNNA visible addresses.

One month before Taylor’s murder, on February 13, police surveillance images showed Taylor’s registered car arriving at Elliott Avenue home, according to police documents. Glover got out of the driver’s side and went home. After a while, Taylor got out of the passenger side of the car, looked around and went back inside.

Police records say detectives saw Taylor’s car pull home “several times during different hours of the day / night.”

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CNN has interviewed Taylor’s family lawyers to comment on the newly released reports. They said earlier that Taylor was not involved in Glover’s alleged drug trade.

Taylor’s family attorney, Lonita Baker, told CNN earlier that “she’s always been our place and she’s still not involved in any illegal activity.”

On March 13, the day Taylor was killed, police issued a search warrant on the home Says they found “large quantities” of suspected crack cocaine and suspected fentanyl pills hidden inside the Crown Royal bag. Police They say Also large amounts of cash, digital scales and “other evidence of drug trafficking.”

At the same time as the building on Elliott Avenue was being raided, police officers were conducting a search warrant for an apartment on Springfield Drive that listed Glover as his home – the home of Brenna Taylor.

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Photographs of crime scenes released by police include a “white board” with the titles “No Knock Warrant” and “Knock and Announcer,” and a list of Taylor’s addresses. Photos of five men are tapped on the board under the word “TARGETS”. Jemarcus Glover’s face and name appear on that list. Neither Brona Taylor nor Kenneth Waker’s name appears anywhere on the board.

On the same day, during a series of recorded prisonhouse calls, the woman whose name is recorded in police records discusses Glover Taylor’s death and their relationship.

During the morning, the woman says, “Chop (Glover’s nickname) that girl died over you.” ”

“All my mail and s *** … there’s nothing to do (with) Bray’s house,” Glover said.

Later that day, Glover tells the woman that when he has mail at Taylor’s house, “Bray and I haven’t been around for two months,” he says. “I have nothing to do with Bray.”

In another call with the Glover woman, he says Taylor had $ 8,000.

“This is what you realized, don’t get me wrong but Bray is handling all my money, she’s handling my money,” Glover said.

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Police found no drugs or money at Taylor’s home, according to a grand jury testimony. Glover talked about claims in which Taylor was involved in a drug ring with the Courier Journal in August Gust. He was arrested shortly after the interview was published for failing to pay bail on various drug offenses, according to a spokesman for the Commonwealth Attorney’s Office.

“The police blame me and are trying to get the whole community out of here. It looks like I brought this to Brano’s door,” Glover told the news outlet. He said, “There was nothing or there was never anything, and at the end of the day, they did it the wrong way and lied on that search warrant and shot the girl from there.”

The report shared excerpts from another prisonhouse call where Glover told an anonymous woman in April that he believed police had seized his car and that a bank statement had been taken from him.

“They got a bullish statement out of the comfort statement, bullish, they got Brano’s address there,” Glover said. “They see that Brain has got that new car (…) she did Livin ‘by job, though, (she) not Livin’ except Notin ‘.”

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