El Dorado News-Times

Lukewarm to ‘slap in the face’

Minnesota police reform efforts draw criticism

- JENNIFER BJORHUS AND TOREY VAN OOT

MINNEAPOLI­S — Minnesota’s historic police reforms drew varied reactions Tuesday, from mild enthusiasm to disgust, with a common refrain: The state still has a long way to go.

A compromise product of a divided state Legislatur­e, the package of policing changes was welcomed as a step in the right direction _ but one that falls far short of the sort of transforma­tional change demanded after the police killing of George Floyd.

Attorney and activist Nekima Levy Armstrong called the final product “a slap in the face” to Black Minnesotan­s. And even one police group said the reforms didn’t go far enough. Andy Skoogman, executive director of the Minnesota Chiefs of Police Associatio­n, said he wanted to see deeper changes to the arbitratio­n process that so often overturns decisions on police discipline.

The bill includes restrictio­ns on chokeholds and neck restraints — such as the one used on Floyd — and a prohibitio­n on warrior-style training for officers. It enhances data collection around deadly force encounters, requires officers to intervene and creates a new state unit to investigat­e such cases. The bill boosts funding for crisis interventi­on training, creates a panel of expert arbitrator­s to handle police misconduct cases and establishe­s incentives for officers to live in the communitie­s they police.

Its passage came after weeks of legislativ­e impasse that had already derailed another special session in June — one that was initially called to review Gov. Tim Walz’s extension of his emergency powers. But the continuing outrage over Floyd’s killing kept up the pressure on the only divided legislatur­e in the nation to find common ground when Walz extended the state of emergency again in July.

“We’ve never stopped working on this, whether we were in session or out of session. That’s something we all felt was important,” said Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-East Gull Lake.

Toshira Garraway, whose partner Justin Teigen was killed by police in 2009, spoke Tuesday during a news conference outside the governor’s residence to denounce the reforms to the state’s criminal justice system passed by the Legislatur­e.

Walz is expected to sign the measure into law Thursday.

“No piece of legislatio­n is perfect and I wouldn’t view any as the end,” Walz said. “As our society changed, and as this issue became apparent, we were able to move. I think it’s pretty amazing we moved some of these issues around POST Board, around chokeholds, around warrior training … we were able to pass that.”

Walz said the first text he got after the proposal passed early Tuesday was family members of people killed by police, who wanted to “express their deep disappoint­ment that it didn’t go far enough.”

“The emotion of being glad to see us come together and move significan­t reform but also the sense of frustratio­n, and in many cases anguish, from some of these families that they didn’t get what they wanted to see in this bill, I think that behooves us to continue to work together,” he said.

Minnesota Public Safety Commission­er John Harrington said he, too, considers Minnesota’s police changes a work in progress.

“When I look at the laws that have been passed in other states for police reform, most of it comes down to banning chokeholds and some duty to intervene, Harrington said. “I think this is far broader and goes far deeper than that. I think we did really good work.”

“My hat is off to both sides, the Senate and the House, for coming to the finish line,” he said.

State Rep. Rena Moran, the DFL co-chair of the People of Color and Indigenous Caucus (POCI) at the Legislatur­e, said lawmakers did the best they could under difficult circumstan­ces. There’s more work to be done, she said.

“We had to work with a Republican Senate that is pretty much police friendly,” Moran said. “That’s the reality of where we are here in the state of Minnesota.”

“It is only the beginning,” Moran said. “It is not the end.”

Steven Belton, president and CEO of the Urban League Twin Cities, said he’s grateful a compromise was struck, but greater reforms are needed. For example, he said, the bill did not include a requiremen­t that law enforcemen­t officers carry their own personal liability insurance _ something that he said creates an incentive for officers to check themselves.

“In a way, this legislatio­n represents the low hanging fruit,” Belton said. “We’ve richer, higher fruit that needs to be harvested.”

But he said the bill is better than nothing: “As my daddy used to say ‘It’s better than a poke in the eye, son.’?”

“We’ll be back in subsequent legislativ­e sessions,” he said, “pushing for more and deeper reform.”

Julia Decker, policy director for ACLU of Minnesota, expressed her disappoint­ment that the bill didn’t require an independen­t prosecutor, such as the Attorney General, to handle officer-involved deaths.

“We certainly hope that the Legislatur­e recognizes this to be the beginning, and not the end,” Decker said.

Some of the most heated reaction came from Communitie­s

United Against Police Brutality (CUAPB), an advocacy group that has worked for decades on policing issues. The group protested outside the governor’s residence Tuesday to voice their disappoint­ment with the package of reforms.

In an interview, CUAPB president Michelle Gross called the measure a “mediocre bill” with “a lot of extra garbage that we don’t need.”

“It doesn’t doing anything substantia­l to end violent policing,” Gross said. “The legislator­s, frankly, are frightened of the law enforcemen­t lobby.”

Gross said the bill failed to include many of the 44 recommenda­tions her group has pushed, such as requiring that police release body camera footage to families of victims within 48 hours, and ending the civil statue of limitation­s on wrongful death to give families more time to file a lawsuit.

Armstrong, founder of the Racial Justice Network, a grassroots civil rights organizati­on, agreed that the reform measure is “very weak” and pointed out that the chokehold language isn’t a ban because it allows an exception “to protect the peace officer or another from death or great bodily harm.”

“We consider it to be watered-down legislatio­n, and a mere fraction of what they could have done to begin to address the systemic nature of police violence and abuse that permeates far too many police department­s in Minnesota,” Armstrong said in an interview.

“The Legislatur­e should not be patting themselves on the back for doing the bare minimum. It shouldn’t have taken two special sessions to get this watered down bill,” she said. “It’s a slap in the face, especially to Black residents in the state of Minnesota.”

Other reform-minded Minnesotan­s also found the bill lacking. Abigail Cerra, a former public defender and member of the civilian-led Police Conduct Oversight Commission, said she cannot speak for the commission, but said the bill should have changed public records law to make police discipline more transparen­t. Currently, only misconduct complaints that are sustained are made public, making it impossible for the public to find out about incidents that lead to many complaints. Many complaints result not in discipline but in “coaching.” And since that isn’t classified as discipline, those cases are not made public.

But she praised the People of Color and Indigenous Caucus at the Legislatur­e for “tenacious leadership and advocacy” on the reforms. “They could have let it drop and they didn’t,” she said. Minneapoli­s Star Tribune staff writer Briana Bierschbac­h contribute­d to this report. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

 ??  ?? A protester holds a photo of George Floyd during a protest in Minneapoli­s over Floyd’s death in this May 28 file photo. Video from the body cameras of two officers charged in the death of Floyd is being made available for public viewing by appointmen­t on July 15, but a judge has so far declined to allow news media organizati­ons to publish the footage for wider distributi­on.
(File Photo/AP/Jim Mone)
A protester holds a photo of George Floyd during a protest in Minneapoli­s over Floyd’s death in this May 28 file photo. Video from the body cameras of two officers charged in the death of Floyd is being made available for public viewing by appointmen­t on July 15, but a judge has so far declined to allow news media organizati­ons to publish the footage for wider distributi­on. (File Photo/AP/Jim Mone)
 ??  ?? Toshira Garraway, whose partner Justin Teigen was killed by police in 2009, speaks during a news conference to denounce the reforms to the state’s criminal justice system passed by the legislatur­e Tuesday, July 21, outside the Governor’s Residence, in St. Paul, Minn.
(Anthony Souffle/Star Tribune via AP)
Toshira Garraway, whose partner Justin Teigen was killed by police in 2009, speaks during a news conference to denounce the reforms to the state’s criminal justice system passed by the legislatur­e Tuesday, July 21, outside the Governor’s Residence, in St. Paul, Minn. (Anthony Souffle/Star Tribune via AP)
 ??  ?? Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-East Gull Lake, speaks about a police accountabi­lity bill Monday in St. Paul, Minn.
(Star Tribune/AP/Glenn Stubbe/)
Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-East Gull Lake, speaks about a police accountabi­lity bill Monday in St. Paul, Minn. (Star Tribune/AP/Glenn Stubbe/)
 ??  ?? Former Minneapoli­s Police Officer J. Alexander Kueng (left) enters the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapoli­s Tuesday with his attorney Thomas Plunkett for a hearing. Kueng is one of four officers, who were fired after George Floyd’s May 25 death.
(AP/Jim Mone)
Former Minneapoli­s Police Officer J. Alexander Kueng (left) enters the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapoli­s Tuesday with his attorney Thomas Plunkett for a hearing. Kueng is one of four officers, who were fired after George Floyd’s May 25 death. (AP/Jim Mone)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States