Black lives Matter is something that is high in the US. Anger, frustration and sadness over the decision not to charge Kentucky police officers for Breonna Taylor’s death spilled into America’s streets as rebels trussed out at a criminal justice system they say is piled against Black people. Vehemence seized the protests in her hometown of Louisville as gunfire struck out and wounded two cops. Cops said they would impose a strict curfew for the next two nights in Louisville. Activists, celebrities and everyday Americans have been calling for charges since Taylor, an emergency medical worker, was shot multiple times by white policemen after one of them was shot while bursting into her home during a narcotics investigation on March 13.
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The cops had a no-knock license but the probe showed they declared themselves before entering, announced state attorney general Daniel Cameron, a Republican and the state’s first Blacktop prosecutor. A grand board returned three charges of reckless endangerment on Wednesday against fired officer Brett Hankison over shooting into a home next to Taylor’s with people inside. Protestors chanted Taylor’s name and marched in cities including New York, Washington, DC, Philadelphia, Las Vegas and Portland. People assembled in Chicago’s Millennium Park, droning demands for justice as drivers on Michigan Avenue honked their horns.
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Cops in Atlanta unleashed chemical agents and made seizures after demonstrators tried to climb on a SWAT vehicle. In Minnesota and Wisconsin, protestors peacefully obstructed highway traffic. In Louisville, one of the wounded cops was treated and released with a leg wound, while the other was shot in the abdomen and doing well after surgery. Larynzo Johnson, 26, was charged with two counts of assault on a policeman and multiple charges of wanton endangerment of police officers.