Breonna Taylor’s mother urges DOJ to charge officers two years after her daughter’s death

Breonna Taylor’s mother urges DOJ to charge officers two years after her daughter’s death
Breonna Taylor’s mother urges DOJ to charge officers two years after her daughter’s death
Courtesy of Bianca Austin

(LOUISVILLE, Ky.) — Two years after Breonna Taylor was shot and killed by police in her Louisville, Kentucky home, her mother met with officials at the Department of Justice, urging federal charges against the officers involved in her daughter’s death.

“The most important thing is to remember that Breonna didn’t deserve this,” her mother, Tamika Palmer, told reporters on Monday following the meeting with Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke and attorneys in the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division. “She was at home, in her own home minding her business when these people kicked in her door and murdered her.”

A DOJ spokesperson confirmed to ABC News that Clarke and attorneys from the Civil Rights Division met with members of Taylor’s family and attorneys, saying, “This matter is currently under investigation and we have no further comment.”

Attorney Ben Crump, who represents Taylor’s family, told ABC News that the meeting at the DOJ lasted for 45 minutes and officials said that they were conducting a “thorough investigation.”

“We don’t want to have to come here next year this time and still not have decisions made,” Crump said.

“You have to think about it from the perspective of the Black community. There are charges brought against us for a lot less, so we hope that they are just as zealous in holding these police officers who killed Breonna Taylor accountable,” he added.

Following the press conference, which took place outside the National Council of Negro Women in Washington, D.C., the family, joined by advocates and leaders in the Black Lives Matter movement, walked to the DOJ to hand-deliver 18,000 signatures from people, calling for the officers to be held accountable.

The 26-year-old Taylor, an emergency medical technician, was fatally shot down on March 13, 2020, in a hail of bullets by plainclothes officers Brett Hankison, Myles Cosgrove and Jonathan Mattingly. They were executing a “no knock” search warrant for Taylor’s ex-boyfriend for allegedly dealing drugs.

He was not at the residence, but her current boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, thought someone was breaking into the home and fired one shot from a 9 mm pistol at the officers. Mattingly was struck in the leg and three officers fired 32 shots into the apartment, killing Taylor, who was in her bedroom.

“No-knock” warrants, which are when officers don’t announce themselves before entering a home, have come under renewed scrutiny following the Feb. 2 fatal shooting of Amir Locke, a 22-year-old Black man who was killed during a raid by Minneapolis police officers.

“For the nation, it’s been two years and one day. For me, I’m trapped in March the 13th, 2020,” Palmer said. “I don’t know how people think I should just move on; that I should just walk away from this thing. Half my life has been spent being Breonna’s mother. It’s the only thing I’ve learned to do well in my life. It’s the thing that I’ll die for – fighting to make sure she gets justice.”

ABC News reached out to the attorneys representing Hankison and Cosgrove, but requests for comment were not immediately returned.

Mattingly’s attorney Kent Wicker told ABC News they have “no comment at this time.”

Hankison and Cosgrove were ultimately fired from the police department and Mattingly retired in 2021.

Taylor’s killing gained national attention and sparked nationwide “Black Lives Matter” protests in the summer of 2020 after the police killing of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man in Minnesota, who died after an officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

Six months after Taylor was killed, Kentucky Attorney General Cameron convened a grand jury to investigate possible charges against the officers.

The grand jury indicted former Louisville police officer Brett Hankison in September 2020 on three counts of wanton endangerment in the first degree for firing into the apartment directly behind Taylor’s, where three people were inside.

Earlier this month, a jury in Louisville found Hankison not guilty on all three counts of wanton endangerment in the first degree.

But none of the officers were charged for their involvement in Taylor’s death – a decision that sparked widespread backlash from social justice advocates.

Amid a barrage of criticism, Cameron told ABC affiliate WBKO in Bowling Green, Kentucky, in October 2020 that the officers who opened fire were “justified” because they “returned fire after having been fired upon.”

He also defended his decision not to give the grand jury on the case surrounding the death of Breonna Taylor the option to consider murder charges.

“I fully take responsibility for the recommendation that we made,” he said at the time. “Based on the facts, that was the appropriate recommendation to make.”

Palmer said on Monday that Cameron and Kentucky “failed” her daughter and she is now asking the DOJ to “do the right thing.”

Trayvon Martin’s mother, Sybrina Fulton, reflects on her son’s legacy a decade after his death

ABC News’ Kendall Ross and Mark Osborne contributed to this report.

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90s Con: ‘Family Matters’ stars reunite, talk streaming, and the possibility of a reboot

90s Con: ‘Family Matters’ stars reunite, talk streaming, and the possibility of a reboot
90s Con: ‘Family Matters’ stars reunite, talk streaming, and the possibility of a reboot
ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

The stars of 90s TV favorites were on hand at Connecticut’s Hartford Convention Center over the weekend for the first-ever 90s Con.

Among the stars who sat down to throwback with ABC Audio included Reginald VelJohnson, Kellie Shanygne Williams, Darius McCrary and Jo Marie Payton from Family Matters

“We’re not just one of the greatest shows of the ’90s,” enthused McCrary, who played Eddie Winslow, “We’re one of the greatest shows of all time!”

Payton offered a hearty “Amen!”

Family Matters ran from 1989 to 1998, first on ABC before a move to CBS for its final season. During the pandemic, the series found a huge new audience via streaming.

“I mean, everything else is horrible, but the cool thing about the pandemic is it drove us all back together,” commented Shanygne. “I think that parents that are our age…they wanted to share…a specific kind of experience with their kids.”

She continues, “When we saw that the show had been streamed over two billion times during the pandemic, that was awesome.”

VelJohnson, the Die Hard veteran who played Winslow family patriarch Carl, is pulling for a reboot, suggesting, “…I’d be a grandfather.” However, he laughed about what that would mean to the show’s most memorable character, played by Jaleel White, “…Urkel’s kids! Oh lord, could you imagine? ‘Did I do that?'” he said, dropping the character’s catchphrase. 

Payton, who already stars in the reboot of The Proud Family on Disney+, has one rule: A reboot can’t be like Peacock’s new Fresh Prince re-do, Bel-Air. “I wouldn’t like to go that way because we were not a dramedy. We were a situation comedy,” she declared.

Coincidentally, Saturday Night Live recently dreamed up a gritty Family Matters reboot, called Urkel.

 

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Premiere date for ’The Umbrella Academy’ season three announced

Premiere date for ’The Umbrella Academy’ season three announced
Premiere date for ’The Umbrella Academy’ season three announced
Courtesy of Netflix

The third season of The Umbrella Academy — the Netflix show based on the comic book series created by My Chemical Romance frontman Gerard Way — finally has a premiere date.

New episodes will drop on the streaming service June 22.

The Umbrella Academy, which first premiered in 2019, follows a dysfunctional family of misfit superheroes who must come together to solve the mystery of their eccentric, not-so-loving billionaire father and, in the process, stop the apocalypse from happening.

Season two, which featured a new Way solo song called “Here Comes the End,” ended with a cliffhanger that, because of some time travel shenanigans, introduces a whole new family of heroes, the Sparrow Academy.

The Umbrella Academy season three will star returning cast members Elliot Page, Tom Hopper, David Castañeda, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Robert Sheehan, Aidan Gallagher and Justin H. Min.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Lainey Wilson, LoCash & more added to Brian Kelley’s ‘May We All’ musical

Lainey Wilson, LoCash & more added to Brian Kelley’s ‘May We All’ musical
Lainey Wilson, LoCash & more added to Brian Kelley’s ‘May We All’ musical
ABC

The first round of guest artists appearing in the upcoming country music musical May We All has been unveiled. 

Co-produced by Florida Georgia Line‘s Brian KelleyMay We All tells the story of Jenna Coates, a singer from the fictional town of Harmony, Tennessee, with dreams to make it big in Nashville. But along the way, she faces a series of setbacks that send her back to her small hometown, where she rediscovers who she is.

The score includes generations of country music, with songs by Kenny Chesney, Miranda Lambert,Chris Stapleton, Dolly Parton and many more. 

May We All will premiere at Tennessee Performing Arts Center in June, with several of Brian’s fellow country artists slated to fill the rotating cast role of Bailey Stone throughout the month, with each guest star performing as the character on their respective date. 

“One Big Country Song” hitmakers LoCash will open the show as Bailey on June 7, with Breland taking over the role on June 8. Lainey Wilson will perform on June 14, with Lindsay Ell filling the role on June 22. 

Danielle Bradbery, Jamie O’Neal and former American Idol contestants Trent Harmon and Caleb Lee Hutchinson are among the other artists who will take part in the production.

May We All will run at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville from June 7 to July 17.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ed Sheeran joins country superstar Luke Combs onstage in London

Ed Sheeran joins country superstar Luke Combs onstage in London
Ed Sheeran joins country superstar Luke Combs onstage in London
Ed: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images; Luke: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for CMT/Viacom

In an apparent attempt to prove that he can work in every musical genre, Ed Sheeran made a surprise appearance Sunday night at a show in London by country music superstar Luke Combs.

Luke was performing at London’s O2 Arena as part of the Country 2 Country Festival, and Ed showed up to join him on a version of Ed’s song “Dive,” which appears on Ed’s album, ÷ (Divide).  While it wasn’t a single, the track’s a fan favorite and Luke often covers it in concert.

“Boys, I don’t know how we follow that,” laughed Luke after Ed walked off stage.

In just the past couple of months, Ed’s collaborated with Camila Cabello on the Latin-flavored “Bam Bam,” Fireboy DML on the Afrobeats song “Peru,” the metal band Bring Me the Horizon on a remix of his own song “Bad Habits,” and Elton John on the holiday song “Merry Christmas.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Alexisonfire announces headlining US tour dates

Alexisonfire announces headlining US tour dates
Alexisonfire announces headlining US tour dates
Harmony Gerber/Getty Images

Alexisonfire has announced a headlining U.S. tour.

The outing launches May 19 in Nashville, and will stretch all the way into the fall before wrapping up October 9 in Anaheim, California.

Tickets go on sale this Friday, March 18, at 10 a.m. local time. For the full list of dates and all ticket info, visit the Alexisonfire website, TheOnlyBandEver.com.

The tour news comes a week after Alexisonfire announced their new album, Otherness, last week, ending the 13-year wait for a follow-up to the band’s last full-length record, 2009’s Old Crows/Young Cardinals.

Otherness will be released June 24. It includes the lead single “Sweet Dreams of Otherness.”

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Lindsay Ell shares the life lessons she’s learned from bad breakups

Lindsay Ell shares the life lessons she’s learned from bad breakups
Lindsay Ell shares the life lessons she’s learned from bad breakups
Emma McIntyre/WireImage

Lindsay Ell has been through some difficult moments. She went through a public breakup, grappled with heartache and ultimately channeled those emotions into heart theory, her most intimate and revealing work to date.

She’s also learned a lot about self-love and what she’s looking for in a partner, the singer tells People.

“What bad breakups teach us is what we don’t want and what we truly do want,” Lindsay says. “Sometimes, it’s just the right relationships at the wrong time. Or sometimes, we fall in love with the wrong people for us.”

But by this point in her life, she’s learned to be happily single and feel truly comfortable with who she is as an artist and a person. “My insecurities make me who I am, and no one can be a better version of you. And you will find the right person who will like that,” she notes.

In the meantime, Lindsay has also used her hard-earned wisdom to support friends as they navigate their own heartbreak, like Carly Pearce. Carly went through a very public divorce in 2020 after marrying fellow artist Michael Ray just eight months earlier.

Now, Carly’s got a new man in her life, and Lindsay says it feels good to see her friend happy again. “Going through that heartbreak and then coming out of it — that’s just such a cool thing to watch a good friend experience that for themselves,” she adds.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Machine Gun Kelly reveals track list & guests for ’Mainstream Sellout’

Machine Gun Kelly reveals track list & guests for ’Mainstream Sellout’
Machine Gun Kelly reveals track list & guests for ’Mainstream Sellout’
ABC

Machine Gun Kelly has revealed the track list and guest artists appearing on his upcoming album, Mainstream Sellout.

In addition to the previously released “Emo Girl” featuring WILLOW and “Ay!” featuring Lil Wayne, the 16-song set includes collaborations with Bring Me the Horizon, blackbear, iann diorr, Gunna and Young Thug, as well as a second tune with Wayne, plus an appearance from SNL cast member and future astronaut Pete Davidson.

Also on the track list is the single “Papercuts,” which was released last year back when the album was called Born with Horns.

Mainstream Sellout arrives March 25. It’s the follow-up to 2020’s Tickets to My Downfall, which was also produced by Blink-182‘s Travis Barker.

Here’s the Mainstream Sellout track list:

“Born with Horns”
“God Save Me”
“Maybe” feat. Bring Me the Horizon
“Drug Dealer” feat. Lil Wayne
“Wall of Fame (interlude)” feat. Pete Davidson
“Mainstream Sellout”
“Make Up Sex” feat. blackbear
“Emo Girl” feat. WILLOW
“5150”
“Papercuts”
“WW4”
“Ay!” feat. Lil Wayne
“Fake Love Don’t Last” feat. iann dior
“Die in California” feat. Gunna & Young Thug
“Sid & Nancy”
“Twin Flame”

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Foo Fighters envisioned record-breaking “Love Dies Young” single as an “ABBA song with huge guitars”

Foo Fighters envisioned record-breaking “Love Dies Young” single as an “ABBA song with huge guitars”
Foo Fighters envisioned record-breaking “Love Dies Young” single as an “ABBA song with huge guitars”
ABC/Randy Holmes

In addition to breaking multiple Billboard records, Foo Fighters‘ “Love Dies Young” has the honor of soundtracking the credits to the band’s new horror movie, Studio 666. As frontman Dave Grohl tells ABC Audio, the track was inspired by one of his personal favorite groups.

“I was basically trying to write a melody that was, like, a hard rock version of an ABBA song,” Grohl explains. “I think that’s as close as I’m ever gonna get.”

Grohl describes “Love Dies Young” as a “tortured love song,” with an ABBA-esque “structure” and “melody.”

“And the beat, it’s got that disco beat to it,” he says. “It’s basically an ABBA song with huge guitars.”

As for the track’s chugging riff, guitarist Chris Shiflett credits that to some goofing off in the studio.

W”e started doing that riff kind of as a joke, if I remember correctly,” Shiflett says. “We were sitting there tracking guitars, going into the ‘Eye of the Tiger’ thing or whatever, and then we were, like, ‘Oh wait, that’s kinda good!'”

Grohl adds, “If everyone’s in a good mood and laughing when you listen to something back, it’s probably a good idea to keep it.”

“Love Dies Young” is the current single off Foo Fighters’ 2021 album, Medicine at Midnight.

Studio 666, meanwhile, is in theaters now. It’ll be available on-demand beginning March 18.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jack White urges major record labels to rebuild vinyl pressing plants: “Something needs to be done”

Jack White urges major record labels to rebuild vinyl pressing plants: “Something needs to be done”
Jack White urges major record labels to rebuild vinyl pressing plants: “Something needs to be done”
Scott Legato/Getty Images

Jack White is urging the three major global record labels — Sony, Universal and Warner — to rebuild their own vinyl pressing plants.

The White Stripes/Dead Weather/Raconteurs rocker’s plea comes as vinyl production turnaround time has slowed immensely amid the COVID-19 pandemic, forcing bands to delay their album releases.

“Vinyl records have exploded in the last decade, and their demand is incredibly high,” White says in a video. “A small punk band can’t get their record for eight to 10 months. I now ask the major labels…to finally build your own pressing plants again.”

He adds, “As the MC5 once said, ‘You’re either part of the problem, or part of the solution.”

In an accompanying written statement, White shares how he founded Detroit’s Third Man Pressing plant in 2017 for “anyone and everyone who walks in the door and wants to press a record.”

“In the last year, I’ve doubled down and invested in even more record presses, more employees to run them, and more shifts to try and accommodate the insane growing demand for vinyl product,” White says.

While Third Man may “benefit in the short term” from being one of the few operational pressing plants, White writes, “In the long term it ultimately hurts everyone involved in the vinyl ecosystem given the bottlenecks and delays.”

“Something needs to be done,” White says. That something, he feels, is for Sony, Universal and Warner to “help alleviate this unfortunate backlog and start dedicating resources to build pressing plants themselves.”

“The issue is not big labels versus small labels, it’s not independent versus mainstream, it’s not even punk versus pop,” White writes. “The issue is, simply, we have ALL created an environment where the unprecedented demand for vinyl records cannot keep up with the rudimentary supply of them.”

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