Consent decrees meant to curb police abuse are ending in more than 20 cities, including Breonna Taylor’s Louisville
US communities that have contended with police violence are losing a major accountability measure to curb abuse. In late May, the Trump administration’s Department of Justice announced a reversal in investigations and consent decrees – agreements between federal officials to hold law enforcement agencies accountable to reform – for several major police departments. The move came years after the Biden administration launched investigations into some law enforcement agencies, specifically as racial justice protests kicked off in the summer of 2020.
Louisville metro police department (LMPD) is one department that saw its justice department investigation ended, despite its high-profile police controversies. In March 2020, LMPD officers shot and killed Breonna Taylor, a 27-year-old emergency room technician, as she slept in bed with her boyfriend. Police forcibly entered Taylor’s home using a “no-knock” warrant, firing 32 bullets into Taylor’s home. Taylor’s death sparked international outcry as the Black Lives Matter protests spread across the world.