Update (September 25, 2020): Just two days after a grand jury announced the three officers involved in the killing of Breonna Taylor wouldn't face charges directly involving her death, new bodycam footage has been released.

Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly's attorney shared the new footage on Twitter Thursday night, Yahoo News reported

"This is the raw video of Louisville officer Sgt. John Mattingly shortly after Kenneth Walker shot him," lawyer Todd McMurtry said in the tweet. "They called him a 'murderer,' when all he did was defend himself."

The video shows officer Mattingly on the ground moments after being shot during the raid. 

While it is unclear which officer's bodycam recorded the incident, a person can be heard in the background saying, "Put him in the car."

A spokesperson for the Louisville Metro Police Department said their office is aware of the video.

"That video shows Sgt. Mattingly receiving medical attention after he was shot. We do not know who leaked that video. We are not going to comment on the content of the video due to our ongoing internal review of what happened that night," the spokesperson said.

The time the video was recorded is also unclear, however, shortly after the grand jury indicted former officer Brett Hankison on first-degree wanton endangerment charges, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron held a press conference, as Blavity previously reported

Cameron said that there wasn't any bodycam footage of the raid, therefore his office was forced to use ballistic reports, witness interviews and 911 calls to piece together the events on March 13. He added that the only video of the incident was not made available until after patrol officers arrived on the scene.

"The video footage begins at the point that area patrol officers arrive at the location," he said. "Therefore, the sequence of events from March 13 had to be pieced together through evidence — 911 calls, police radio traffic, and interviews."

According to Yahoo News, the officers who executed the search warrant of Taylor's home were a part of the criminal interdiction division and do not wear body cameras. 

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer ended up firing then-police Chief Steve Conrad for the officers not wearing bodycams, local news station WDRB reported back in June. 

“I want to start by letting you all know that we have no body-worn video cameras to share with you from this morning’s shooting. This incident was related to the execution of a search warrant by members of our Criminal Interdiction Division, and some of the officers assigned to this division do not wear body-worn video systems,” Conrad said. 

If you wish to contribute to the fight for social justice in Louisville, head here to donate to the Louisville Community Bail Fund.

Original (September 5, 2020): Officers involved in the killing of Breonna Taylor in March may have had bodycams on, according to a new report from VICE News.

For months, police officials in Kentucky have claimed — along with then-police chief Steve Conrad who said in a press conference — that there was no bodycam footage, according to WDRB.

“I want to start by letting you all know that we have no body-worn video cameras to share with you from this morning’s shooting. This incident was related to the execution of a search warrant by members of our Criminal Interdiction Division, and some of the officers assigned to this division do not wear body-worn video systems,” Conrad said in March the night after Taylor was killed. 

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer later fired Conrad because the officers were allegedly not wearing bodycams, calling it an "institutional failure" that "will not be tolerated."

But in crime scene photos obtained by VICE News, officers are seen either with bodycams or vests that had holders for cameras. 

Fischer originally backed up Conrad's assessment, telling VICE in July that no officers had bodycams on. 

Yet the photos from after the shooting show officer Tony James with a bodycam on his shoulder and officer Myles Cosgrove with a camera holder built into his vest.

VICE News gained access to the photos as part of a large batch of about 1,200 shots taken from the crime scene by the Louisville Metro Police Department. The photos were included as a part of Kenneth Walker’s criminal case against the city for what happened during and after the deadly raid. 

Walker, Taylor's boyfriend, was in the home with her when police barged in and shot her to death. He was arrested for firing a warning shot that allegedly hit Sgt. Jon Mattingly in the leg.

He was arrested and charged with attempted murder but the case was temporarily dismissed.

According to VICE News, the photos were taken the night of the shooting and the day after, but they appear to show that officers moved things around at the scene the day after the raid. 

The photos shared by VICE News show an apartment that was covered in bullet casings and bullet holes. One shows that even a pot on the stove was hit with a bullet. 

“The crime scene photos absolutely appear to show a scene that is different from that night to the next day. To the naked eye, the photos appear to show a crime scene that has been tampered with,” Walker's lawyer Steven Romines told VICE News in an interview. 

During the raid, police also shot into the apartment of Taylor's neighbors through her ceiling and floor. 

Protests centered around Taylor's killing are slated to continue for the 100th day, and more are scheduled to take place during the Kentucky Derby on Saturday.