Judge says she is concerned the detective may have lied to get Brianna Taylor's a search warrant.Louisville judge he was signed a search warrant for Brianna Taylor's home that ultimately led to her death said Thursday she is concerned that the detective may have lied to obtain the warrant.
Said to the courier journaliststhat she will defer to the FBI, which has been investigating the search warrant application for Taylor's apartment that led to the fatal raid.
The courier journal asked Shaw if she intended to demand that detective Joshua Jaynes showed why he shouldn't be held in concept for swearing in adaptive that he "verified through the US postal inspector that suspected drug dealer Jamarcus Gover a has been receiving packages" at Taylor's home.
Records obtained by the courier journal and first reported by WDRB show that loville police were told before the March 13 that no packages suspicious or otherwise had been delivered to Glover at Taylor's residence in the months before she was shot and killed by police executing A no knock search warrant.
And they indicate that stg. Jonathan Mattingly who was shot and wounded at during the search, had a large role in the verifying information with the postal inspectors office than previously stated.
"Stg. Mattingly as stated, he told detective jeans there was no package history at the address." Sailor told investigator according to a summary of the interview.
Kazma also called nobles, who told him "he remembered there being no packages delivered to the address and was confused about the conflicting information on the affidavit as well" according to the report.
"Stg. Salyer stated there were no packages of any kind being delivered to the address suspicious or otherwise," investigators wrote in a summary.
Salyer also told the public Integrity unit investigators the packages could have been delivered and received under another name to the address.
This isn't the first time Jaynes'
search warrant application has been questionedPostal Inspector Tony Gooden told WDNB news in may that his officer had been asked by what we now no was Shively police to investigate whether Taylor's apartment had been receiving suspicious mail.
His office Gooden sad, conclusion it wasn't:
"There is no packages of interest going there " He said.The department has since confirmed Jaynes' is one of 6 officers and are a professional standard unit investigation which examines whether departmental police were violated.
He also is under investigation by the FBI, according to the attorney for witnesses, who has been interviewed in the probe.
Schroeder said Monday, in response to a question about whether Jaynes was under investigation that " there is currently an investigation by the FBI, a criminal investigation, and as I discussed earlier..., once the criminal investigation is done, the administration investigation will commence."
