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WNBA players keep seeking officers' arrests after $12M settlement in Breonna Taylor's shooting

The first day of the WNBA regular season schedule began with its players dedicating the 2020 season to Breonna Taylor and getting justice for her family.

On the first day of the league’s playoffs seven weeks later, Taylor’s family settled a wrongful death lawsuit against the city of Louisville for $12 million. It includes an agreement to implement a number of police reforms, per the city’s announcement on Tuesday.

The settlement, many players said in their media availabilities, is “a step” but isn’t what the players have fought for over the past few months.

Candace Parker: Settlement ‘doesn’t do anything’

Candace Parker, with ball, on the court.
Candace Parker spoke out against the lack of arrests in Breonna Taylor's shooting. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

Los Angeles Sparks veteran Candace Parker is in the “wubble” at IMG Academy with her 11-year-old daughter, Lailaa, and has spoken about being an active role model for her. When asked by reporter Erica L. Ayala about the settlement during the Sparks media availability on Tuesday, she pulled from that aspect of her life.

“This season has been dedicated to arrest the cops that are responsible for the murder of Breonna Taylor,” Parker said in a Zoom video call. “I think it’s interesting that this is a step, but this isn’t what our goal was. And obviously we wear Breonna Taylor’s name on the back of our jersey but she represents so many other women that have been killed because of police brutality.

“I think as a mother, there’s no amount of money — there’s no amount of money — that could take that away. So I don’t think that does anything.”

Angel McCoughtry, whose Las Vegas Aces are off until Sunday’s semifinal series begins, first lobbied for the league to put Breonna Taylor’s name on jerseys. She told Yahoo Sports in July it was about “planting the seed” for it to grow into reform, change and ultimately unity.

She also questioned the lack of arrests, via Ayala:

“That's it? ... They deserve millions, but first of all, that's not a lot of millions. And second of all, why aren't (the cops) arrested?

"What else do we need to do? What else do people need to see?"

Seattle Storm star Breanna Stewart opened the season with a dedication and 26 seconds of reflection alongside the New York Liberty’s Layshia Clarendon, vice president of the WNBA Players Association. Stewart came a similar answer to the settlement news.

“I think that a settlement is not justice,” she said. “Money is not getting justice for Breonna Taylor or her family and those officers still need to be arrested.”

WNBA coaches on justice, real reform

Sparks coach Derek Fisher said seeking social justice reforms is “the most powerful and impactful part of why we’re even here this year.”

“I don’t know if justice has a price, really. In terms of Breonna’s family, her legal team and the decision that they made to reach this settlement, my hope is that it is a small positive in what is otherwise a very difficult and horrible situation.”

He added: “It’s good to know that there’s been some resolution from possibly a financial perspective but there is no price on life and my hope is that we’ll all continue to fight for the justice that Breonna Taylor’s family deserves as we all move forward.”

Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve also noted that settlements aren’t a longterm solution and that it’s the taxpayers who will make that payment. Which means there are no repercussions for when a situation like Taylor’s happens again.

Breonna Taylor settlement includes policy changes

Louisville mayor Greg Fischer said the settlement includes the following policy changes:

  • Housing credit program to incentivize officers to live in certain low-income communities in the city

  • Plans to include social workers in the police department

  • Commanding officer must review and approve all search warrants, affidavits in support of the warrant and risk matrices before an officer seeks the judge’s approval on it

The state attorney general, Daniel Cameron, is the one who can charge the officers. Neither the mayor nor the chief of police can make that call.

Taylor, 26, was killed shortly after midnight on March 13 when police officers served a no-knock search warrant on her apartment in a narcotics investigation. She was not the target and did not have a criminal record. Taylor was an EMT in the city.

Her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired a shot when police entered because he said he thought their apartment was being broken into. Officers responded with multiple shots, hitting and killing Taylor. One officer was fired for “blindly” firing 10 rounds into the apartment, the Louisville interim Chief Robert Schroeder said. The others involved were assigned to administrative duties. The case gained national interest after the killing of George Floyd while in police custody in May and the calls to Say Her Name.

Taylor’s mother, Tamika Palmer, filed a lawsuit in April alleging battery, negligence and excessive force. The settlement is an agreement but does not mean the city admits wrongdoing in the death, Fischer said.

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