How policing failed Breonna Taylor

Published: Sept. 24, 2020, 8:15 p.m.

Why police are rarely charged for shooting people \u2014 and whether police tactics will change. The movement to abolish Greek life on campuses. And, the question of court-packing.
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In Louisville, clashes erupted after a grand jury\u2019s decision in the police shooting of Breonna Taylor. Investigative reporter Robert Klemko is in Louisville. He shares why it\u2019s so hard to charge police officers of wrongdoing. Follow The Post\u2019s live updates here. 
Across college campuses, students are calling for an end to Greek life amid the nation\u2019s racial reckoning. \u201cIt's the students who are in Greek life or who were in Greek life who are leading it and who are not calling for reforms,\u201d reporter Emily Davies says, \u201cThey're calling for an end to this system.\u201d
There haven\u2019t always been nine justices on the Supreme Court. Alison Michaels, host of the Post podcast \u201cCan He Do That?\u201d speaks with Lisa M. Holmes, a political science professor at the University of Vermont, about the number of seats on the Supreme Court and how it has been politicized in the past.
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