It's good Mr. Williams is willing to speak out. Hopefully that will help people better understand it's not that the process is a complete sham.
But here's a different take from another former federal prosecutor, who is now a law professor at Georgetown. The author is Black.
I’m a former prosecutor. The charge in Breonna Taylor’s death is pathetically weak.
The article is behind the WaPo pay-wall, so here's the key section.
"I’m a former prosecutor, and
I would have charged all three officers with manslaughter. I think murder would be overcharging, because the officers did not have the intent to kill Taylor. Still, if three gang members burst into an apartment, were met with gunfire by somebody in the home, and in response shot up the apartment complex and killed an innocent person, they would almost certainly be charged with homicide.
It’s no less of a crime when three cops do the same thing. Self-defense is an issue, but one that a jury should decide. We know the officers continued to fire long after any threat ceased. A neighbor called
911 to report gunfire, and
68 seconds into the call, you can still hear the shots. Further, under Kentucky law, you can’t claim self-defense if your actions placed innocent people in danger, as the police who killed Taylor obviously did."