The admission came as part of a plea agreement that former LMPD Detective Kelly Goodlett signed that details her involvement in falsifying information the warrant used to raid Breonna Taylor's apartment.
Only hours earlier, a grand juror in the Taylor case had filed a motion in Jefferson Circuit Court asking a judge to release the evidence and make the proceedings public, in part, to protect jurors from backlash.
The juror suggests in a filing in Jefferson Circuit Court that Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron is using the grand jurors 'as a shield to deflect accountability and responsibility for these decisions.'
Lawyers for Breonna Taylor's family demand Kentucky AG Daniel Cameron release grand jury transcripts
Speaking in Jefferson Square Park, national civil rights attorney Ben Crump raised a litany of questions about what evidence jurors reviewed before indicting former Louisville police Det. Brett Hankison.
Former LMPD Det. Brett Hankison was charged with three felony counts of wanton endangerment for shooting into a neighboring apartment and showing 'extreme indifference to human life.' No officers were indicted in Taylor's death.
Lonita Baker echoed fellow attorney Ben Crump in calling Daniel Cameron's handling of the announcement "offensive and outrageous."
One of the Taylor's neighbors has filed a lawsuit against the Louisville Metro Police officers involved in the raid on Taylor's apartment
TIMELINE | Step-by-step look at Breonna Taylor case, from no-knock warrant to Wednesday's indictment
A Jefferson County grand jury charged former Louisville police Det. Brett Hankison with three felony counts of wanton endangerment on Wednesday for shooting into three apartments during the raid on Breonna Taylor's home in March.
The fatal shooting of Taylor, a Black woman, has drawn national attention and sparked months of protests in Louisville.
In the early morning email to police officers, Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly also called some protesters "thugs" who have cursed and thrown urine at officers.