Breonna Taylor memorial.Photo: Jason Armond/Getty
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Two years ago, on March 13, 2020, 26-year-oldBreonna Taylorwas in her apartment with fiancé Kenneth Walker when shortly after midnight, Louisville Metro Police officers executing a “no-knock” search warrant charged through her front door.
Taylor was shot multiple times. She gasped for air for five minutes before dying on the floor of her home.
Police were executing a search warrant for an investigation into a suspected drug dealer, who police alleged had once retrieved a package from Taylor’s home. But the suspected drug dealer didn’t live in her building — and had, in fact, just been arrested at a different location.
Breonna Taylor.Breonna Taylor/instagram
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Taylor became a face for theBlack Lives Mattermovement andher death led to a city-wide ban on no-knock warrants. Her unnecessary death, along with the murder ofGeorge Floydtwo months later, sparked nationwide protests against police brutality.
“Breonna’s legacy is very similar toTrayvon Martin’s legacy,” civil rights attorney Ben Crump tells PEOPLE. “Trayvon raised the consciousness level of Black Lives Matter; Breonna raised the consciousness level that Black women’s lives matter.”
Breonna’s family has since pleaded for justice, pushing for criminal charges against the officers and a state and federal ban on no-knock warrants — while Louisville passed legislation on the matter, most jurisdictions haven’t.
“No one should feel what we feel right now,” says her cousin, Trisha Curry. “Breonna should still be here. There’s no way someone should come in a residential apartment like that and shoot because you can’t tell where your bullets are going to go.”
“Unless somebody’s life is in danger and it’s a child, or they’re threatening their own life, there shouldn’t be a no-knock situation,” says Breonna’s aunt, Bianca Austin. “Possessions over people. It should not be a thing. We encourage people in this fight to put a ban on no-knock warrants in their community.”
Christian Monterrosa/AP/Shutterstock
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Amir’s death, says Curry, was a painful reminder of what happened to Breonna. “I saw the video,” she says. “I felt like I lost Breonna again. Amir Locke’s family should not feel the pain that we had to feel. They should not.”
“Nothing shocks me in America anymore when it comes to police violating the constitutional rights of people of color,” says Crump. “However, I thought if there was one place that would learn from the history lesson of the tragic killing of Breonna Taylor, it would be the city of Minneapolis who had just went through the George Floyd ordeal.”
“It’s just a constant reminder that we have to continue to be vigilant,” he added.
Crump says there needs to be a policy shift where no-knock warrants “are not executed, only in the most extreme circumstances, if not outright abolished, because we saw with Amir Locke how dangerous these things become when you just have the right to go bust into some Black people’s homes. And it’s foreseeable that, with so many Americans availing themselves to their Second Amendment rights to defend their homes, it’s not only dangerous for the police, but it’s dangerous for the innocent Black people as well.”
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Adding to the family’s pain is therecent acquittalof former Louisville police officerBrett Hankison, the only officer to face charges in the botched raid. Hankison, who wasterminated from the police departmentfor his involvement in the raid was accused of wanton endangerment for firing into Breonna’s neighbor’s apartment.
“I was disgusted because for one, not only did you not give Breonna justice, but you also didn’t provide that for her neighbors either,” says Curry. “They are traumatized for the rest of their lives as well as we are.”
“When we feel like we are moving 10 steps ahead, we get knocked back 12,” says Austin. “And it’s just like we have to keep building ourselves up to get back out here and put ourselves in the forefront. Just let people know that we’re serious and we want accountability. And every day it feels like we are starting all over again.”
source: people.com