The US Justice Department has announced civil rights charges against four Louisville police officers over the drug raid that led to the death of Breonna Taylor.
Ms Taylor was the black woman whose shooting contributed to the racial justice protests that rocked the US in the spring and summer of 2020.
The charges are another effort to hold law enforcement accountable for the killing of the 26-year-old medical worker after one of the officers was acquitted of state charges earlier this year.
Federal officials “share but cannot fully imagine the grief” felt by Ms Taylor’s family, US attorney general Merrick Garland said in announcing the charges.
“Breonna Taylor should be alive today,” he added.
The charges are against former officers Joshua Jaynes, Brett Hankison and Kelly Goodlett and Sergeant Kyle Meany.
Local activists and members of the Taylor family celebrated the charges and thanked federal officials.
“This is a day when black women saw equal justice in America,” lawyer Benjamin Crump said.
Ms Taylor was shot by Louisville officers who had knocked down her door while executing a search warrant.
Her boyfriend had fired a shot that hit one of the officers as they came through the door and they returned fire, striking her multiple times.
Hankison, who was dismissed from the department in 2020, was one of the officers at Taylor’s door and one of three who fired shots that night.
He was acquitted by a jury of state charges of wanton endangerment earlier this year in Louisville.
Jaynes had applied for the warrant to search Mr Taylor’s house.
He was fired in January 2021 by former Louisville Police interim chief Yvette Gentry for violating department standards in the preparation of a search warrant execution and for being “untruthful” in the Taylor warrant.