It could become a crime to taunt a police officer in Kentucky, under a bill that passed the state Senate reported The Associated Press.
The measure was filed months after Louisville, the state's
largest city, became the site of huge protests in the wake of the police
killing of Breonna Taylor. The bill passed the Republican-dominated Senate
22-11 and now awaits House input.
Under the legislation, anyone who “accosts, insults, taunts,
or challenges a law enforcement officer with offensive or derisive words, or by
gestures or other physical contact, that would have a direct tendency to
provoke a violent response” would be guilty of a misdemeanor and face up to 90
days in jail and fines.
The proposal also increases penalties for rioting. For
instance, those charged with rioting would be required to be held for a minimum
of 48 hours. Another provision would criminalize aiming “a light, a laser pointer,
an activated horn or other noise-making device towards the head” of a first
responder.
Several Republican senators who voted against the bill
shared concerns that some parts of it would violate First Amendment rights and
strain the judicial system. Nevertheless, they signaled support for the bill if
some parts of it were amended in the House.
State Sen. Danny Carroll, a Republican who sponsored the
bill, said he filed the proposal in response to last summer's Louisville
protests against police brutality and racial injustice. Demonstrations — some
of which turned violent — were a frequent occurrence, as protesters called for
charges to be brought against the officers involved in Taylor's death. Many
gathered peacefully in Jefferson Square Park in downtown Louisville for weeks.
Dubbed “Injustice Square” by protesters, it became an impromptu hub during
months of demonstrations.
Taylor, a Black woman, was shot in her Louisville home
multiple times by police during a botched drug raid. A grand jury indicted one
officer on wanton endangerment charges in September for shooting into a
neighbor’s apartment, but no officers were charged in connection with her
death.
Police had a no-knock warrant but said they knocked and
announced their presence before entering Taylor’s apartment, a claim some
witnesses have disputed. No drugs were found in Taylor’s apartment.
Republicans hold supermajorities in both the House and
Senate.
Democratic lawmakers warned that the proposal could be used
to unfairly target peaceful protesters. State Sen. Gerald Neal, a Democrat who
represents Louisville, called the legislation “unnecessary” and
“unreasonable."
“This is a hammer on my district,” Neil said. “I personally
resent it. This is beneath this body.”
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