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ESPN did not cut off Jalen Rose’s Breonna Taylor message
ESPN NBA analyst Jalen Rose has been using his air time heading into commercial breaks to weigh in on social justice issues. Tim Fuller-USA TODAY Sports

Jalen Rose has been delivering social justice messages during ESPN broadcasts throughout the postseason, and he continued with that during Wednesday night’s game between the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat. There has been some talk that ESPN cut his remarks short, but that was not the case.

Just before a commercial break during halftime of Game 4, Rose mentioned how well Heat rookie Tyler Herro was playing. He then raised his voice and shouted that it would be a “great day to arrest the cops that murdered Breonna Taylor.”

David Aaro of FOX News watched the clip and was left with the impression that Rose had his comments “cut short” by ESPN. That was not the case. Rose often provides commentary just before commercial breaks. It’s usually about basketball, but lately he has been using that time to share his thoughts on the social justice movement. Here’s another recent example:

Earlier on Wednesday, a Kentucky grand jury indicted one of three police officers involved in the Louisville drug operation that led to the death of Taylor. No other officers were charged. Rose and many others were upset, and Rose said before the Celtics-Heat game that he wanted to dress nice in case he said something that got him fired.

Some were bothered that Rose used the word “murdered” instead of “killed,” as there is a legal distinction between the two. The charges in the Taylor case are wanton endangerment, which is a separate charge from murder. The latter would imply that police went to the house Taylor was staying in with the intent of killing her. According to police reports, Taylor’s boyfriend Kenneth Walker fired at an officer and police returned fire, killing Taylor in the process.

LeBron James and several other NBA players also shared their thoughts on Thursday’s ruling.

This article first appeared on Larry Brown Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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