No cameras captured the final minutes of Breonna Taylor’s life. We used crime scene evidence and testimony to reconstruct what happened and show the mistakes that led to her killing by police. With @singhvianjali@NatalieReneau@DrewJordan_NYT Thread 👇 nyti.ms/3mSUptT
Our investigation began when we obtained over 1,000 crime scene photos of Breonna Taylor’s apartment. One immediate revelation then was the police fired several more bullets (32) that initially claimed (~18).
My colleague @singhvianjali - who’s an architect and @nytgraphics reporter - used the photos and SWAT videos to precisely model Taylor’s apartment. We then catalogued each bullet hole, trajectory and possible corresponding image.
We focused on using the crime scene analysis and testimony to visually reconstruct what happened and effectively show what police body cameras should have shown.
In these documents and in other releases, it was chilling to see dozens of bullets smash household items in almost every room of Taylor’s home.
And to see the bullet holes in kitchen cabinets, Taylor’s shower and soap dish, closets, windows and walls, even passing into the ceiling, through her neighbor’s apartment and out the roof.
My colleague @singhvianjali - who’s an architect and @nytgraphics reporter - used the photos and SWAT videos to precisely model Taylor’s apartment. We then catalogued each bullet hole, trajectory and possible corresponding image.
Meanwhile, @NatalieReneau and I watched over testimony the police officers gave to investigators, and what some told SWAT officers right after, which allowed us to recreate - and question - what they said happened.
We likewise scrutinized what Taylor’s boyfriend Kenneth Walker said to investigators, in his 911 call, in police footage immediately after the shooting as he was being arrested, in jailhouse calls and conversations, and in media interviews.
He was consistent throughout multiple conversations with different people, some he didn't know would be relayed, in his assertion that he could not hear police announce themselves, and about what he and Taylor heard during the raid.
It’s a critical point: inside a cavernous breezeway, while a discussion with a neighbor is happening, could Taylor & Walker have clearly heard the police announce? Police didn’t do so initially, and according to the Lieutenant, didn’t "yell" until they were ramming in the door.
We also examined 911 calls and police interviews with Taylor’s neighbors whose doorways are in the same breezeway. Investigators specifically asked if they heard police announce. None did. Some were asleep and woke to gunfire, not prologued police announcements.
This is consistent with interviews The Times conducted and calls into question the assertion of Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron who said police did knock and announce. For more on this watch The NYT Presents episode The Killing of Breonna Taylor. hulu.com/series/the-new…
We examined the autopsy reports and photos of Breonna Taylor. They were, of course, disturbing and heartbreaking. And the ballistics analysis in LMPD reports, evidence bags and the FBI reports.
Each used different item codes for handguns and bullets. By cataloguing them and connecting the dots, we could determine that Detective Cosgrove - who continued shooting until his magazine emptied - shot Breonna Taylor three times.
He shot Taylor in her left abdomen and her upper chest. Two other bullets - one Cosgrove’s and one Mattingly’s - entered and exited her left arm and leg and penetrated the wall directly behind.
Two of the entry and exit wounds hit the wall no higher than 1.5 ft above the floor, suggesting Taylor was shot as she was falling. Two bullets hit her right foot.
We would later compare this with an FBI report (released recently) and adjust details that were not visible in crime scene photos or videos, like bullets recovered beneath carpets. @singhvianjali ultimately produced a model and trajectories more complete than even the FBI report
We counted 38 police/SWAT vehicles responding after the shooting. They *did* wear body cameras; we watched many hours of that footage. What stood out was the chaos, how SWAT was shocked the raid happened and the manner in which it did. Vice, ABC have shown more of those scenes.
And later @babimarcolini pored over grand jury proceedings, which resulted in charges against Brett Hankison for shooting into the neighbors’ home and no charges against the officers who killed Taylor.
Three of those grand jurors have since come forward to say they felt impeded from conducting their civic duty because Kentucky AG Daniel Cameron precluded them from assessing charges against the two officers who, it was found, had shot Taylor. soundcloud.com/wfplnews/breon…
This story is possible b/c of tireless work by @singhvianjali, who modeled Taylor’s apartment and the trajectories of the gunshots by her boyfriend & the police, @NatalieReneau who edited the video, @DrewJordan_NYT’s GFX treatment & @babimarcolini. We produced the piece together.
A word on our other coverage of Louisville police. We reported when their aggression turned fatal (killing David McAtee - nytimes.com/video/us/10000…) and likewise when they were fired upon (we retraced the shooter's steps - nytimes.com/2020/09/25/vid…)
Our team has produced more than a dozen stories in 2020 on policing in America and issues of race. You can see them in our collection on the Visual Investigations homepage nytimes.com/visual-investi…
Breaking: Detective Joshua Jaynes, who prepared the search warrant for the botched raid on #BreonnaTaylor's home, received notice today from Mayor Greg Fischer that he would be terminated. @nickatnews has the latest. nytimes.com/2020/12/29/us/…
Here's the termination letter Detective Jaynes received for being untruthful in the information he provided to obtain the warrant, and not being present on the scene while it was executed. The three officers who fired their weapons that night were not part of the prior intel op.
Update: Also fired will be Detective Myles Cosgrove, an officer who fired into Taylor’s until he ran out of ammunition. One of his 16 shots was the fatal bullet, FBI ballistics concluded. Read more: nyti.ms/382O9M5
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On Friday, Atlanta police officer Garrett Rolfe shot Rayshard Brooks at a Wendy's drive-thru as he was running away w/ a Taser. Mr. Brooks died in hospital. What happened in the minutes before he was killed? @Tina_Kelso & I broke down the critical moments nytimes.com/2020/06/14/us/…
22:33 APD officers are called to Wendy's in South Atlanta. Mr. Brooks had fallen asleep in his vehicle, which was parked in the drive-through, causing other customers to drive around him, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said in a statement. gbi.georgia.gov/press-releases…
22:42 Officer Devin Brosnan arrives, wakes Brooks up, and says "Alright, you good? Just pull in somewhere and take a ... alright, you good?"
"Yeah."
"Alright."
Brooks dozes off. Then moves his car from the drive-thru line to the parking space.
Security video sent to us by @schindy was important evidence. It showed when Arbery first appeared on Satilla Drive. But the timecode was wrong.
Our colleague in Georgia, @RichardFausset, obtained 911 calls and logs. The audio files came with the correct time stamp, and the text logs corroborated this (10 sec. difference - presumably accounted for by different computer system, or dispatchers typing).
Today in @nytimes print: 4 data-filled pages on hospital & civilian attacks in Syria, the UN's limited inquiry into these, and the perpetrators, which the UN will likely withhold. Design by @talasafie, @cgee and @gianordoli. Interactive here: nytimes.com/interactive/20…
@evanchill@john_marquee@babimarcolini@tiefenthaler@gianfiorella We previously estimated that the plane flew for 21-28 seconds between transponder going off and what we now know is the second strike (map below). This video fills that gap, and shows that two missiles hit around 23 seconds apart, the first most likely disabling transponder
@evanchill@john_marquee@babimarcolini@tiefenthaler@gianfiorella The new video also explains why car alarms are already flashing in the earlier CCTV footage (below). We now know this shows the second strike. The person who filmed another video also told us he heard a loud noise before he started filming.
Just nominated for Oscars are two documentaries set in Syrian hospitals whose staff bravely continued to work while under siege. Congrats to @waadalkateab@watts_edward@nevmab the team behind @forsamafilm and @FerasFayyad, director of The Cave for their important work.
By analyzing photos of debris, structural damage & blood spatter, and video of the crash, we determined that flight #PS752 had turned around and was heading back twd Tehran airport when it crashed, some 10 miles from where its transponder last pinged nytimes.com/2020/01/07/wor…
Two videos we verified of the crash - including this posted early on by an Iranian journalist - confirm #PS752 was ablaze, kept some altitude, before exploding and downing fast. Debris and remains spread over large area. @trbrtc geolocated a 2nd video.
.@ntabrizy and @yousuralhlou spoke to eyewitnesses who filmed the immediate aftermath and said the plane was ablaze. working on further reporting around potential cause.