By this shirt here: Truck I'm A Spoiled Wife It's My Husband's Fault Because He Treats Me Like A Queen Shirt, hoodie and sweater
While building up her stock, Brown wanted to start buying pieces that she had worn on shoots and to rebuild her archive. Handily, she had kept several detailed journals of her time modeling, including diary entries, magazine cutouts, and Polaroids. “I love when I’m digging through the Truck I'm A Spoiled Wife It's My Husband's Fault Because He Treats Me Like A Queen Shirt, hoodie and sweater archives from my shoots, and I kind of get transported back to that day. Some memories just get triggered by the clothes. I specifically remember wearing some of these outfits,” she says. “I created these little personal challenges to try and re-create some of those images and pieces that I had from editorials that I liked.” So far, Brown has located a leather Burberry skirt that she wore in a show, a Jean Paul Gaultier bathing suit from a Glamour shoot with Arthur Elgort in 1999, and Tom Ford–era Gucci pants with a leather trim. Currently, Brown is on the hunt for a Christian Dior by John Galliano salmon pink gown that she wore to her high school prom, along with the matching shoes that had gold and salmon pink ribbons. “My agent told Christian Dior that I was going to my prom and they sent me the dress and shoes to my house in Georgia,” she says.
Former detective Brett Hankison was indicted with three counts of first-degree wanton endangerment for bullets that went into other apartments, not the Truck I'm A Spoiled Wife It's My Husband's Fault Because He Treats Me Like A Queen Shirt, hoodie and sweater that killed Taylor. The other two officers involved, Myles Cosgrove and Jonathan Mattingly, will not be charged. The maximum penalty for Hankison’s verdict is a fine of up to $10,000 and one to five years in prison; Hankison, who was fired from the Louisville Police Department in June for firing “wantonly and blindly” into Taylor’s apartment, will be held on a cash bond of $15,000 once he is arrested. Kentucky attorney general Daniel Cameron announced Wednesday afternoon that a Jefferson County grand jury had indicted just one of the three Louisville police officers involved in the killing of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old Black EMT who was shot in her apartment on March 13.