DOJ asks judge to drop charges against 2 officers in Breonna Taylor case ‘in the interest of justice’


The Justice Department on Friday asked a court to drop charges against two former police officers accused of providing false information on a search warrant that led to the fatal 2020 police raid at the apartment of Breonna Taylor.

First bringing charges against the officers in 2022, federal prosecutors alleged that Joshua Jaynes and Kyle Meany provided false information on the search warrant that allowed police to enter Taylor’s Louisville home. They were also charged with civil rights violations. 

In a filing Friday, an attorney with DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, said those charges should be dropped, and said the department has notified Taylor’s family of the move.

In this June 25, 2020, file photo, signs are held up showing Breonna Taylor during a rally in her honor on the steps of the Kentucky State Capitol in Frankfort, Ky.

Timothy D. Easley/AP, FILE

A federal judge had twice struck felony charges against the two officers, reducing them to misdemeanors, most recently in 2025.

“The Government undertook a further review of this matter,” according to the filing.  “Based on that review, and in the exercise of its discretion, the Government has determined that this case should be dismissed in the interest of justice.”

Whether the remaining charges are ultimately dropped is up to a judge, who has yet to issue a ruling.

Taylor was fatally shot in the 2020 raid that came as plainclothes Louisville officers were serving a warrant searching for Taylor’s ex-boyfriend, who they alleged was dealing drugs, but who was not at the apartment.

In this Sept. 18, 2020, file photo, two women hold a sign of Breonna Taylor during a rally in Louisville, Ky.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images, FILE

Officers broke down the door to Taylor’s apartment, and her then-current boyfriend Kenneth Walker, who thought someone was breaking into the home, fired one shot with a handgun, striking an officer in the leg.

Three other officers returned fire, shooting 32 bullets into the apartment.

A former Louisville officer, Brett Hankison, was convicted of a civil rights offense in connection with Taylor’s death during the raid and sentenced to two years and nine months in prison.



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