U.S. Black Woman Shooting Death Case Former Police Indictment Protests September 24, 10:29

A local grand jury has charged a former police officer who has been dismissed in a case in which a black woman was shot dead by a police officer in Kentucky, southern United States.

However, protests have been carried out locally for not being charged with murder, and criticisms of the judicial authorities are increasing.

In March, in Louisville, Kentucky, a black woman, paramedic Briana Taylor, was sleeping at home and died after being shot multiple times by a police officer who stepped into a drug investigation.



Later, it became clear that Taylor had nothing to do with the drug investigation, and police dismissed one of the three police officers on the scene.



A local grand jury charged the ex-police officer with a dangerous act on the 23rd.



In response, a large number of citizens gathered in the field to protest, demanding that a former police officer be charged with murder, and that two other police officers on the scene were also charged with the crime. ..



In some cases, protesters and police officers on alert have clashed, raising criticism of the judiciary.



In this case, tennis player Naomi Osaka wore a mask with Taylor's name in the first match of the US Open to protest against racial discrimination, and among the protests that continued in various parts of the United States, racial discrimination. It is often taken up as an incident by.