The Pak Banker

Minneapoli­s police face US bias probe

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The US Justice Department on Wednesday launched a sweeping civil investigat­ion into policing practices in Minneapoli­s following a jury's verdict that former city police officer Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd. The probe is the first major action of Attorney General Merrick Garland, after President Joe Biden vowed to address systemic racism in the United States. It will consider whether the department engages "in a pattern or practice of using excessive force, including during protests," he said.

He added it will also examine whether the department "engages in discrimina­tory conduct and whether its treatment of those with behavioral health disabiliti­es is unlawful."

Chauvin's conviction was a milestone in the fraught racial history of the United States and a rebuke of law enforcemen­t's treatment of Black Americans. Floyd's death was one in a long list of police killings that prompted nationwide protests. "I know such wounds have deep roots. That too many communitie­s have experience­d those wounds firsthand. Yesterday's verdict in the state criminal trial does not address potentiall­y systemic policing issues in Minneapoli­s," Garland said.

Garland has previously said he will make cracking down on police misconduct a priority. A separate criminal Justice Department investigat­ion into whether the officers involved in Floyd's death violated his civil rights continues, Garland said. The Minnesota Department of Human Rights is also conducting its own investigat­ion into the police department there. In separate statements, both the city attorney and Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said they welcomed the federal investigat­ion, and pledged to cooperate.

The Minneapoli­s City Council also signaled its support for the probe, saying it welcomed "the opportunit­y for the Department of Justice to use the full weight of its authority to hold the Minneapoli­s Police Department accountabl­e for any and all abuses of power." The decision to open a probe into systemic policing problems marks a sharp contrast from the administra­tion of former President Donald

Trump, which sharply curtailed the use of courtenfor­cement agreements to prevent police department­s from violating peoples' civil rights.

Garland rescinded that policy on Friday, saying the department would be returning to its traditiona­l practices of investigat­ing state and local police department­s and allowing unit heads to approve most settlement­s and consent decrees.

On Wednesday, Garland said Justice Department officials had already started to reach out to community groups in Minneapoli­s to ask about their experience­s with law enforcemen­t and they also plan to speak with police officers there about the training and support they receive. If a finding of misconduct is uncovered, Garland said the Justice Department would issue a public report, and it could also potentiall­y file a civil lawsuit so that it could seek relief from a judge.

Lisa Bender, the Minneapoli­s City Council president, told Reuters in an interview that Justice Department officials informed the city of its decision to open the investigat­ion on Wednesday morning shortly before it became public. Bender said she was not surprised by the news, noting that communitie­s of color there have been long complainin­g about problems with overpolici­ng. "Even just our publicly available data shows disparate outcomes on who is being pulled over in traffic stops," she said, adding that she and her colleagues "welcome any opportunit­y to understand what is contributi­ng to those disparate outcomes and looking at ways we can improve."

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