AG Cameron urges dismissal of impeachment petition against him

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Kentucky’s attorney general is urging state lawmakers to dismiss an impeachment petition against him, fighting back against allegations by three grand jurors from the Breonna Taylor death investigation who joined in seeking his ouster from office.

The petition, signed by a handful of Kentuckians, alleges Attorney General Daniel Cameron breached public trust and failed to comply with his duties in his handling of the Taylor case and then misrepresented the grand jury’s work to the public. An attorney for the three grand jurors signed on their behalf to preserve their anonymity.

The Republican attorney general has responded that the impeachment petition is “so lacking in legal and factual support” that it should be dismissed. Cameron’s response, signed by Deputy Attorney General Barry Dunn, was filed with the clerk of the Kentucky House late Friday.

The response also said the petition is technically flawed because state law requires people seeking impeachment to sign the petition themselves. An attorney for the petitioners on Saturday called it a “shocking” attack on the confidentiality of the grand jurors.

Cameron was the special prosecutor who investigated the actions of the Louisville police officers involved in the fatal shooting of Taylor during a warrant search in March 2020. One officer was charged for allegedly firing into an adjacent apartment, but the three grand jurors said prosecutors never gave them the option to consider charges against the officers who fatally shot Taylor.

In response to the impeachment petition, Cameron said his team followed the law, presented a thorough case and the Taylor grand jury ultimately voted to follow their recommendation.

“Members of the public — including the three grand jurors — may well feel frustration, sorrow, anger and a range of other emotions about the events that unfolded on March 13, 2020,” his response said. “They are free to believe that the criminal law should offer more. But the attorney general enforces the laws passed by the General Assembly.”

The investigation culminated in a grand jury ruling that did not charge any of the officers in the Black woman’s death. The shooting sparked protests over racial injustice.

Cameron said at a widely viewed news conference in September that the grand jury “agreed” that homicide charges could not be brought against the officers. The three grand jurors disputed that, along with a statement by Cameron that the grand jury was “walked through all the homicide offenses.”

The three grand jurors said they wanted to explore criminal charges for the officers but were denied because Cameron’s prosecutors told them they couldn’t make the charges stick.

Responding to claims that evidence was withheld, Cameron’s response said: “What evidence? The presentation in this case was one of the longest grand jury presentations in Kentucky history.”

The Associated Press