Mysterious packages at Taylor's apartment
In the March 12 affidavit requesting search warrants for Taylor's apartment and the house where Glover was allegedly selling drugs, LMPD Detective Joshua Jaynes wrote that Glover was seen leaving Taylor's apartment in January with a "suspected USPS package in his right hand" and then drove to a "known drug house" on Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
Jaynes wrote in the affidavit that he verified "through a US Postal Inspector" that Glover had been receiving packages at Taylor's address.
A U.S. postal inspector in Louisville, however, has said police did not use his office to verify that Glover was receiving packages at Taylor's apartment. A different agency had asked in January to look into whether Taylor's home was receiving suspicious mail, the inspector told WDRB News, and the post office concluded it wasn't.
LMPD interim Chief Robert Schroeder
placed Jaynes on administrative reassignment in June until questions about the warrants can be answered.
Glover said Wednesday there was nothing suspicious about that package or any other that he had sent to Taylor's home. He said he worried about deliveries to his house being stolen, and Taylor had agreed those items could be sent to her apartment instead.
"Nothing ever been illegal there," he said. "Getting shoes and clothes coming through the mail is not illegal. Nothing illegal at all.
Taylor is mentioned only one other time in the search warrant affidavit, when police say a vehicle belonging to her was seen outside Glover's alleged drug house in the Russell neighborhood.
The warrant application also says Glover listed her address as his, and that police confirmed that with "multiple computer databases."