Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Minneapoli­s to pay record $27 million to settle lawsuit with George Floyd’s family

- Tribune News Service Star Tribune

MINNEAPOLI­S — Minneapoli­s will pay a record $27 million to settle the lawsuit brought by George Floyd’s family.

Attorneys for the family called it the “largest pretrial settlement in a civil rights wrongful death case in U.S. history.”

“When George Floyd was horrifical­ly killed on May 25, 2020, it was a watershed moment for America,” family attorney Ben Crump said at a Friday afternoon news conference. “It was one of the most egregious and shocking documentat­ions of an American citizen being tortured to death by a police officer ... one of the worst ever witnessed in history.

“History will judge us for how we responded to this tragedy.”

Crump applauded Mayor Jacob Frey and council members for the settlement, saying Minneapoli­s was being watched in its darkest hour: “Now the city can be a beacon of hope and light and change for cities across America and across the globe.”

With the mayor standing nearby, Crump compliment­ed the city’s police reforms since Floyd’s death and urged further changes.

“Mayor Frey, you have our word, our voices and our might to help you muscle through additional change that will transform policing in Minneapoli­s and hopefully policing in America.”

At the news conference, Frey called this moment a “once in a generation opportunit­y to truly effectuate change.”

Floyd’s nephew, Brandon Williams, said he hopes the settlement changes the way policing is done.

“They’re supposed to protect and serve ... Had the officer deescalate­d the situation, we’re not here doing this press conference, George is still alive,” Williams said. “We’d give the settlement back gladly to have George here with us.”

After a roughly 40-minute private meeting Friday afternoon, City Council members voted unanimousl­y to approve the settlement, and Frey’s office said he will approve it as well.

Of the $27 million, $500,000 will be used “for the benefit of the community around 38th and Chicago,” where Floyd died, according to the city.

“This is a deeply traumatic event that, unfortunat­ely, is a part of too many

Black and brown families’ realities,” Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins said after the vote. “There is no amount of money that can replace a brother, a son, a nephew, a father, a loved one but what we can do is continue to work towards justice and equity and equality in the city of Minneapoli­s and that’s what I commit to do.”

The settlement could have major implicatio­ns for the city and its Police

Department, whose fate hangs in the balance as some city leaders and community members seek to replace it.

Floyd’s family sued the city and the four officers charged in his death in July, just months after his death — and the video of former Officer Derek Chauvin kneeling on him — spurred protests across the world.

When they filed the suit, Crump said, “This is an unpreceden­ted case, and with this lawsuit we seek to set a precedent that makes it financiall­y prohibitiv­e for police to wrongfully kill marginaliz­ed people — especially Black people — in the future.”

The federal suit accused the officers of a “reckless disregard” for Floyd’s civil rights, saying they used deadly force in nondeadly circumstan­ces. It also alleged that the department engaged in a culture of “warrior-style” or “killology” training, failed to terminate dangerous officers and fostered a culture of racism, leading to a violation of Floyd’s civil rights.

In April 2019, Frey announced he was banning officers from receiving “fear-based” training. The police union quickly countered that it was partnering with a national police organizati­on to offer free “warrior-style” training.

In July 2020, the Police Department announced it was changing its useof-force policy to encourage officers to deescalate tense situations and hold them accountabl­e when force or weapons are used. The new policy required officers to document how they tried to deescalate situations, why they decided to use force and why they chose a specific level of force.

Moments after the settlement vote Friday, Council President Lisa Bender read a statement: “I do want to, on behalf of the entire City Council, offer my deepest condolence­s to the family of George Floyd, his friends and all in our community who are mourning his loss. No amount of money can ever address the intense pain or trauma caused by this death to George Floyd’s family or the people of our city.”

The previous record for police payouts came in 2019, when city agreed to pay $20 million to settle the lawsuit filed by the family of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. She was killed by former Minneapoli­s police Officer Mohamed Noor after she called to report a possible assault in an alley behind her south Minneapoli­s home.

From 2006 through 2020, Minneapoli­s paid just over $44 million to settle officer conduct claims and lawsuits, according to data posted on the city’s website and updated in January.

The civil suit is separate from the criminal trials for the four officers charged in his death. Jury selection began this week for Chauvin, who faces charges of second-degree murder, thirddegre­e murder and manslaught­er in Floyd’s death.

 ?? Tribune News Service
Getty Images ?? Philonise Floyd
(center), the brother of George
Floyd, testifies before the House
Judiciary Committee hearing on Policing Practices and Law Enforcemen­t Accountabi­lity at the U.S. Capitol in June 2020 in Washington, DC
Tribune News Service Getty Images Philonise Floyd (center), the brother of George Floyd, testifies before the House Judiciary Committee hearing on Policing Practices and Law Enforcemen­t Accountabi­lity at the U.S. Capitol in June 2020 in Washington, DC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States