Lodi News-Sentinel

Minnesota Human Rights Department launches probe into Minneapoli­s police

- By Jessie Van Berkel and Liz Navratil

MINNEAPOLI­S — The Minnesota Department of Human Rights will launch an investigat­ion into the Minneapoli­s Police Department after filing a civil rights charge related to the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died in police custody last week.

The probe, announced Tuesday by Gov. Tim Walz, will look at Minneapoli­s police policies and procedures over the past 10 years

to determine whether the department has engaged in discrimina­tory practices toward people of color.

“This is not about holding people personally criminally liable,” said Human Rights Commission­er Rebecca Lucero, who will lead the investigat­ion. “This is about systems change.”

Lucero said this will differ from past examinatio­ns of the Police Department. First, the state Human Rights Department will work with city leaders to try to make some quick changes, she said. There will also be a longer process to potentiall­y reach a consent decree, which can be enforced by the courts, Lucero said.

“This is not a report. This is something that will result in court action and require change,” she said.

The investigat­ion follows the arrest and charges against former Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin, a white officer who knelt on Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes before he died. Three other police officers were fired after the deadly encounter.

“We are going to establish peace on the streets when we address the systemic issues,” Walz said.

The move is the first time the Human Rights Department has launched a systemic investigat­ion into the largest police department in the state.

Minneapoli­s Mayor Jacob Frey said an agreement with the state could be a needed catalyst for change that he considers to have been hindered over the years by the Minneapoli­s Police Federation, the department’s powerful police union.

“For years in Minneapoli­s, police chiefs and elected officials committed to change have been thwarted by police union protection­s and laws that severely limit accountabi­lity among police department­s,” Frey said. “Breaking through those persistent barriers, shifting the culture of policing, and addressing systemic racism will require all of us working hand- in-hand.”

Minneapoli­s police union President Lt. Bob Kroll did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Kroll has been an outspoken critic of the city’s liberal leadership, which he says is anti-police and holds back on needed resources and manpower. In a recent letter to the rank-and-file, he blasted the city’s handling of the riots following Floyd’s death, saying officers had been made “scapegoats” for the continued violence.

Meanwhile the City Council issued a joint statement welcoming the state scrutiny. In a news conference Tuesday afternoon, council members presented a wide range of ideas about how they hope this investigat­ion could help reform the Police Department.

Some want to defund the department quickly, though others prefer to take a longer approach, soliciting more community input before drasticall­y overhaulin­g the force. Some talked about increasing community oversight of the department, or sending different kinds of firstrespo­nders to overdoses or domestic violence calls.

“I know you don’t care what we say. You care about what we do, and this is action,” said Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins.

Jenkins noted that the city, as a whole, has some of the largest racial disparitie­s in the country.

Police Department data also shows in disparitie­s in how Minneapoli­s police use force. While 40% of city residents are people of color, they are involved in 74% of all cases of police use of force, according to the most recent department data available. Black people are involved in 63% of the cases.

The human rights probe came as Democratic state lawmakers rolled out policing reforms that they said should be a centerpiec­e of the special legislativ­e session expected this month, a push Walz endorsed. The proposals mirror some of the recommenda­tions outlined in a February report produced by a 16-member task force on deadly police encounters led by state Public Safety Commission­er John Harrington and Attorney General Keith Ellison, who has taken over the prosecutio­n of Chauvin.

Lucero said her agency will also be looking into state level changes. Some of those could involve legislativ­e action, Lucero said, such as eliminatin­g the ban on residency requiremen­ts. That ban has allowed Minneapoli­s to reach a point where just under 7% of officers live in the city, according to its human resources department.

Chauvin and three other officers involved in Floyd’s arrest on Memorial Day are under investigat­ion by state prosecutor­s and the U.S. attorney’s office and the FBI, which is determinin­g whether Floyd’s constituti­onal rights were violated. Lucero said her department’s investigat­ion is focused on state law, and she is not sure whether there also will be a federal civil rights investigat­ion.

The state’s effort to enter into a binding agreement on discrimina­tion and use of force is not the first effort to curb alleged police abuses in Minneapoli­s. The Police Department entered into a federal mediation agreement with the U.S. Justice Department in 2003 aimed at addressing a host of police issues such as use of force, diversity and race relations. It was billed at the time as a way to soothe community tensions inflamed by the fatal police shooting of a machetewie­lding Somali man in March 2002, followed by a riot a few months later in north Minneapoli­s. But, critics say the department has kept few of those promises.

Minneapoli­s Police Chief Medaria Arradondo, who was involved in the pact’s negotiatio­ns, said at the time that he was willing to revisit the agreement, but it’s unclear which of the reforms have been enacted.

That agreement outlined some critical areas of improvemen­t, notably use of force and how officers handle suspects who are dangerousl­y mentally ill. But critics say that the city for years fell behind on commitment­s in other areas: disciplini­ng officers who were repeated targets of citizen complaint; providing culturally sensitive training across the department; hiring and keeping minority and female officers; and creating a forum for ongoing dialogue after the agreement expires.

Over the years, the agreement led to changes in the Police Department’s policy on use of force and improvemen­ts in mental health training, while ending the controvers­ial practice of transporti­ng suspects in squad cars with K9s, city officials say.

 ?? JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A makeshift memorial and mural were growing Sunday outside Cup Foods in Minneapoli­s where George Floyd was killed by a Minneapoli­s police officer.
JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES A makeshift memorial and mural were growing Sunday outside Cup Foods in Minneapoli­s where George Floyd was killed by a Minneapoli­s police officer.
 ?? SAIT SERKAN GURBUZ/ZUMA PRESS ?? People protest the killing of George Floyd near the Minneapoli­s Police Department’s Fifth Precinct building on Saturday.
SAIT SERKAN GURBUZ/ZUMA PRESS People protest the killing of George Floyd near the Minneapoli­s Police Department’s Fifth Precinct building on Saturday.

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