Breonna Taylor’s mother spoke on the “TODAY” show Wednesday about her fight for justice before the painful one-year anniversary of her daughter’s death.

Saturday is a year since Taylor was fatally shot in her own apartment shortly before 1 a.m. by Louisville police officers serving a no-knock warrant. She was 26.

“I don’t even know the difference in the days anymore,” her mother, Tamika Palmer, told Blayne Alexander on “TODAY.”

One of the three Louisville officers involved in the shooting has been indicted, but it was not for any of the shots that killed Taylor. Brett Hankison, who was fired from the department last June, was indicted by a grand jury in September on three counts of wanton endangerment for the shots he fired that went into a neighbor’s wall.

Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron said in September that the shooting was justified because Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, had fired at the officers first. Walker said the officers never announced themselves, and he thought it was a home invasion.

Walker was initially charged with assault and attempted murder of a police officer for shooting Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly after the officers burst into the apartment. Prosecutors later dismissed those charges, and on Monday, Jefferson Circuit Court Judge Olu Stevens permanently closed the case against Walker, meaning he can’t be recharged, which Palmer told Alexander was “long overdue.”

Taylor’s name was frequently invoked as a symbol of injustice and a rallying cry during protests against police brutality last summer after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Palmer was heartened to see her daughter’s memory honored by people across the country.

“Eternally grateful,” she said. “So many people who never even met her, but they learned of her and they — they came to stand for her because what happened to her wasn’t right. I could never say thank you enough.”

A federal investigation into Taylor’s death remains ongoing, but her death has led to some concrete change. The Louisville Metro Council unanimously passed Breonna’s Law in June banning no-knock warrants, a controversial practice that gives police the authority to enter a home without announcing themselves. The law passed in Louisville but not statewide.

Palmer’s focus has not wavered in the year since her daughter’s death. She and her family reached a $12 million settlement with the city of Louisville in September, but her main focus is wanting to see someone held accountable for her daughter’s death.

“Just to know who Breonna was — she didn’t deserve that,” Palmer said. “And so I’ve always felt like I’ve had one job: It was to protect my kids. And so, how do you not continue to fight?”

This story was originally published on TODAY.com.

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Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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