I have too much time on my hands, so used the search function. Just for Breonna Taylor there were these posts that might qualify
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Didn't really see a dedicated thread on this - yet this was a major recent decision that will inevitably spark this week's protests. Attorney general ended up only charging one of the officers - and it wasn't for murder but more along the lines of recklessly shooting...
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Sarah Bland turned up
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then I ran out of energy/interest, sorry.
it's a pretty universal kind of phenomenon, though. For any out-group if something bad happens to one of them, many people will employ their full forensic skills in trying, desperately, to find something that person did 'wrong' and so bought it on themselves.
I might be trivilaising it, but as it's the only way it applies to a group I'm part of, I've always noticed it with cyclists killed in RTCs. Invariably there will commence a frantic search to find some way in which the cyclist was less than 100% perfect in their 'roadcraft', thus allowing any blame to be shifted from the motorist who drove into them, or the road-traffic engineers who created a dangerous road layout. It never works the same way when it's a motorist who is killed or injured, then it's always someone else's fault.
It also, of course, happens when women are raped or murdered - as with the Sarah Everard case recently, when after she was 'arrested' and then raped and murdered by a serving cop, a senior legal official started going on about how women need to be more aware of their legal rights when being arrested - implying that Ms Everard was at fault for not knowing the cop wasn't legally allowed to "arrest" her, rather than it illustrating a massive problem with police culture and their vetting of recruits - demontrating the kind of psychopaths who are allowed to join the police (and in this case, allowed to become firearms officers and being among the very small number allowed to carry a gun)