The Oakland Press

DOJ announces center to help cops, offers aid to Minneapoli­s

- By Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti

MINNEAPOLI­S » The U. S. Department of Justice announced Tuesday that it has put $3 million toward the creation of a national center that will provide training and assistance to help law enforcemen­t agencies prevent the use of excessive force, and officials expressed hope that Minneapoli­s would be the first city to take advantage of the resource.

The announceme­nt was made in Minneapoli­s, where the police department has been under pressure to reform since the May 25 death of George Floyd, which touched off mass demonstrat­ions against police brutality around the nation.

Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said Tuesday that he is grateful for the offer and hopes city leaders will take advantage of it. He said the center would provide more resources and training, including mental health resources for officers, at a time when he trying to make changes at the department while facing diminished staff.

“In creating a new MPD, I want to utilize all available tools and resources to support the hardworkin­g and profession­al men and women of the MPD,” Arradondo said. “We have an obligation and duty to be guardians of our communitie­s and enhance our level of service and this program seeks to do just that.”

The program’s announceme­nt two weeks before the election carried echoes of the law and order theme President Donald Trump has hammered at since unrest broke out in several cities around the country after Floyd’s death.

The national response center will be run by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police and will be a resource for all state, local and tribal law enforcemen­t agencies, said Katharine Sullivan, principal deputy assistant attorney general for the Office of Justice Programs.

She said justice officials envision the center would have a coordinato­r, who is an expert in policing, who will help agencies with training, issues of officer safety, officer recruitmen­t or retention, and other issues.

“The idea is that we are here to meet your needs. Not to descend,” Sullivan said.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt was not the result of a larger-scale investigat­ion and consent decree that would bind the Minneapoli­s Police Department and force major changes within its ranks.

Previous consent decrees mandated reforms in Ferguson, Missouri, after the killing of Michael Brown, and in Baltimore after the police custody death of Freddie Gray.

While the Justice Department could still initiate a “pattern and practice” investigat­ion as part of a civil rights probe, Attorney General William Barr has suggested such investigat­ions may have been previously overused. A federal criminal investigat­ion into whether the four officers violated Floyd’s civil rights is still ongoing.

Floyd, a Black man who was handcuffed, died after former officer Derek Chauvin, who is white, pressed his knee against Floyd’s neck for several minutes while Floyd said he couldn’t breathe.

His death sparked a renewed sense of outrage over the deaths of Black people at the hands of police, and sparked mass demonstrat­ions that have defined the last sixmonths of American life. Chauvin and three others were charged in Floyd’s death and are expected to stand trial in state court in March.

Floyd’s death prompted calls for overhaulin­g or defunding police department­s nationwide. In Minneapoli­s, a majority of City Council members pledged to dismantle the department, though a city commission ultimately blocked the council’s effort to put the issue before voters this November.

Arradondo and Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat who opposed abolishing the department, have continued to make incrementa­l changes to change the agency’s culture, including banning chokeholds and changing the department’s use of force policy.

All of this came as the city saw rising violence this summer, budget cuts due to a loss of revenue as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the departures of dozens of officers.

Arradondo said Tuesday that he’s down an estimated 130 officers compared with this time last year, and he expects more departures by year’s end. A lawyer helping officers file for disability leave has said he’s helped process about 175 claims since Floyd’s death.

The police department is also being investigat­ed by the state Department of Human Rights, which is looking into the department’s policies and practices over the last decade to see if it engaged in systemic discrimina­tory practices.

Barr has said he recognizes there is racism in the U.S., and that there’s reason for some communitie­s to be more suspicious of law enforcemen­t than others, but he doesn’t think there is systemic racism.

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