Louisville officer shot in Breonna Taylor raid shares the UNTOLD story



Breonna Taylor became a symbol of the Black Lives Matter movement when she was shot and killed by Louisville police — but the narrative surrounding her death has done a 180.

Years later, those who jumped to demonize the police have been proven wrong after a judge ruled that Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, was the individual whose actions led to her death, not the Louisville police.

But that didn’t stop the cops present on the scene from being smeared by celebrities, politicians, the media, and activists.

This is why Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly is telling Jason Whitlock of “Fearless” — who calls the outrage following Taylor’s death a “racial hoax” — what really happened on Friday, March 13, 2020.

That night, Mattingly was serving a warrant in a drug investigation — and was initially lauded as a hero for his actions.

“Something happened, and I’m not sure when it took place, but it was fairly quickly,” Mattingly tells Whitlock. After the shooting, Mattingly was in surgery to repair his femoral artery, which was severed when he was shot by Walker.

“That night we went, and they said knock and announce, because Jamarcus Glover, he’s not at this location,” Mattingly explains. “So I said, ‘That’s fine.’ They said, matter of fact, she’s a heavy-set black female, give her extra time to come to the door.”

“After about a minute, no answer, my lieutenant says, ‘Go ahead, and hit the door.’ The breacher hits the door, when it comes open, I’m standing on the left of it. He’s on the right of it,” Mattingly continues, noting that the situation inside was strange.

“Normally people are giving up, they’re hiding, or they’re running. There’s never two people down a hall just in wait, and by the time my mind’s registering this, and I get my gun around to them, I see the tip of Kenneth Walker’s silver gun, and it’s too late.”

“Boom, shots fired, I feel the impact on my leg, I return four rounds and get behind the door. He dives into a room as soon as he shoots and leaves Breonna in the hallway. She attempts to follow him in the room ‘cause her feet crossed the threshold of the door, where she then fell back,” he explains.

“So she ran into the line of fire, chasing this guy who had abandoned her in the hallway,” he adds.


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Colin Kaepernick apparently begged for a job on the practice team — Warren Sapp explains why the Jets don't want him



Who wouldn’t want Colin Kaepernick on their team?

The New York Jets, that's who.

The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback turned activist famously began taking a knee during "The Star-Spangled Banner" during football games to protest on behalf of BLM, which ignited plenty of conversations as to whether activism should be a part of sports.

Kaepernick then filed a formal complaint alleging that NFL team owners colluded to keep him off the field in the wake of his protests, which concluded with a confidential settlement.

Now, he’s begging the New York Jets to sign him to their practice squad.

“I would be honored and extremely grateful for the opportunity to come in and lead the practice squad,” the letter read. “I would do this with the sole mission of getting your defense ready each week.”

A day later, the Jets signed Trevor Siemian.

Pro Football Hall of Famer Warren Sapp thinks he knows why Kaepernick’s begging isn’t working.

“I know that the people that make the decisions about football don’t want Colin involved in it,” Sapp tells Jason Whitlock. “You made a decision, you got the settlement, now go on. There’s no way you sue your boss and get back and get a job again. That just doesn’t happen.”

“There’s some mistakes you can’t recover from,” Whitlock agrees.

“It’s plain and simple. They bring a lot of people in on Tuesday. If you’re not getting invited on Tuesday around the league, then you are not considered an asset to the National Football League or any football team. So let it go,” Sapp adds.


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Footage reportedly shows reinstated Tennessee state Rep. Justin Jones holding up and assaulting a driver during BLM's 'Summer of Love'



Democratic state Rep. Justin Jones of Tennessee was reinstated to his position Monday after being expelled last week over his involvement in what Tennessee House Speaker Cameron Sexton (R) described as an "insurrection."

Hundreds of Jones' supporters swarmed the state House prior to Jones' reinstatement, threatening, "no Justin, no peace," reported WZTV-TV.

Shocking footage from 2020 has re-emerged this week indicating that, contrary to the protesters' suggestion, there's no guarantee of peace with Justin Jones back on the scene.

A history of violence

According to the Tennessean, Jones faced over 15 charges ranging from trespassing to assault during what former Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan dubbed the "summer of love."

Among the charges: assault of an officer; resisting arrest; disrupting a meeting; disorderly conduct; criminal trespassing; obstruction of a passageway; and aggravated littering.

Davidson County General Sessions Judge Lynda Jones, a Democrat, reportedly dismissed or accepted a decision not to prosecute Jones' charges.
It would appear, therefore, that Jones got away with his alleged involvement in a violent June 2020 protest near the Tennessee Capitol.

Jones, who insisted that summer, "We must rise up, fight back," later claimed he was challenging "an entrenched white power structure."

The district attorney's office issued an indictment against Jones on two reckless endangerment charges, claiming he threw a traffic cone through the driver's side window of a moving car, striking the individual inside, reported the Tennessean.

Scoop Nashville, a local publication, shared a video of the incident, which appears to show several protesters initially holding up traffic.

While one individual pretends to have been injured by an idling vehicle, another person wearing a sun hat — identified as Jones — approaches the driver's side of a white truck and peers inside.As the driver attempts to circumnavigate the illegal blockade, the individual in the sunhat picks up a traffic cone and hurls it into the victim's face.

Trampling the law

In May 2020, Jones reportedly climbed atop a police cruiser along with another radical, Jeneisha Harris, amid an anti-cop protest in which a courthouse was set on fire, reported Fox News Digital.
It is unclear from footage of the incident whether Jones and Harris were attempting to incite the mob or secure a photo op. Charges for reckless endangerment were brought against them over the damage done.

Three hours after their issuance, however, the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department recalled the warrants for Jones' and Harris' arrests.

Despite the recall, WZTV reported that 60 detectives had sorted through video and photographic evidence from the incident, establishing that the same police car Jones roosted on was the same that had been "significantly damaged," with its windows broken.

Central Precinct Saturday, May 30 youtu.be

An attack on democracy

Jones attacked former Tennessee House Speaker Glen Casada on Feb. 28, 2019.
He was charged with two counts of misdemeanor assault and one count of disorderly conduct after throwing a coffee at Casada and Republican Rep. Debra Moody, reported the Tennessean.

The arrest report indicated that Jones fought past uniformed state troopers and screamed, "Casada is a racist," while winding up his unprovoked attack.

Jones was subsequently barred from the Capitol and ordered to avoid contact with both Casada and Moody.

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H/T: The Post Millennial

Police SHOOTING: The TRUTH about Tyree Moorehead



Last year, a black man named Tyree Moorehead was shot and killed during a police encounter in Baltimore. So naturally, BLM activists and other progressives are saying it was just another case of police brutality.

What made the entire situation all the more ironic is that while he was alive, Moorehead considered himself an anti-violence activist.

He was a creator of Baltimore’s no shoot zones, places that marked where someone had previously been shot and killed. Moorehead would spray paint an anti-violence message on them in the hopes of preventing additional violence.

Moorehead was then fatally shot by an officer a mere block away from one of those zones.

Apparently, as an activist, Moorehead had suggested that if cities want murderers to stop murdering people, they should actually pay them not to murder.

Seriously. And it gets worse.

Moorehead was a convicted murderer as well. He was 15 when he was put away for second-degree murder and spent 18 years behind bars.

He said he could relate to the shooters.

While this story sounds tragic on its face, Lauren Chen reports that there is more to the story.

Once the body cam footage of Moorehead was released, it confirmed what the police had been claiming from the beginning — and what the media was hesitant to share with the public. Because, of course, they need the activists to activist.

What actually happened was that Tyree Moorehead was killed while he was in the middle of trying to stab a woman in broad daylight, and the responding police officers saved her life.

Chen comments, “There are still people out there who are questioning whether this was an excessive use of force,” despite body cam footage revealing that he was clearly in the middle of trying to stab a woman.

Had the police not gotten involved, her life might have been the one lost.

But of course, activists and Twitter users alike refuse to believe what they can clearly see.

One Twitter user commented “I have seen nothing that warrants that many shots.”

Chen says, “Moral of the story here is that as always, be critical when you see these stories blow up. When you see all these news agencies reporting the same headline, the same spin — because odds are there’s something they’re not telling you.”


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