12 Seconds in the Dark: A Police Officer's Firsthand Account of the Breonna Taylor Raid by Sgt. John Mattingly
The half truths and outright lies presented by the attorneys representing the family of Taylor and the offender that shot this officer (before any cop entered the residence) have gone unanswered and unchallenged for too long. This firsthand account by the police sergeant that was shot and nearly killed while serving a lawfully issued search warrant in a perfectly lawful and professional manner (contrary to reports, it was NOT handled as a "No Knock" service). The false narrative spread by lawyers, celebrities, and the media for $$$$$ and political purposes, was never countered by the City of Louisville because it would have harmed the "Optics" used by their allies in the BLM movement, even though the result was riots, injuries, and deaths due to "mostly peaceful protests."
It's an extremely credible and detailed account of what actually occurred and well worth the time to read or listen to.
"On the night of March 13, 2020, Louisville police executed a search warrant on the residence of Breonna Taylor. Approximately one minute after the police first announced themselves six times with “police, we have a warrant!” the door was breached, and Sgt. John Mattingly stepped into a dark threshold. Before setting foot into the eight-plex unit, he saw two figures in a dark and narrow hallway about 25 feet away.
With just the glint of light from a TV and the lights from their handguns’ muzzles, the next thing he saw was a flash from a handgun, and he was struck in a femoral artery. Mattingly went down and he fired his service weapon, while other officers fired at the location from which someone (Kenneth Walker) had just tried to kill Mattingly. Twenty-year-veteran Sgt. Mattingly was bleeding out. His lieutenant grabbed his police vest and dragged him from the doorway. From the moment the door was breached until he was grabbed by his fellow officer totaled 12 seconds.
Mattingly’s newly released book, detailing what really happened on March 13, 2020, is titled: “12 Seconds In The Dark.” The book begins with Mattingly recounting a “day in his life”: investigating a murder, and then receiving a call about a gunshot fired. He and other officers investigate, not knowing if there’s a shooter waiting in ambush. Not knowing any of that, at the door they still announced themselves as the police.
On the Taylor raid, Mattingly had no “connection” with the people and places named in the warrant. He had volunteered to help serve the warrant. Why, then, after serving “over 2,000” standard warrants, would Mattingly suddenly decide that, on this case which he had no personal investment in, he and six other cops would suddenly breach a door without announcing (as required by the warrant)? One can start with that incongruity.
"I'm not fluent in the language of violence, but I know enough to get around in places where it's spoken."
April 09, 2022, 01:49 PM
sigmonkey
The Ho was dirty.
The rental car tied to a murder. "Holding" for her criminal boyfriend.
Such crap from those that push false narratives which result in more criminal acts, vandalism, terrorism, rioting etc. Those who do such things are despicable.
"the meaning of life, is to give life meaning" ✡ Ani Yehudi אני יהודי Le'olam lo shuv לעולם לא שוב!
April 09, 2022, 06:44 PM
jljones
Louisville is a standard liberal cesspool. They are reaping what they have sown catering to extremists.