Deutsche Welle (English edition)

George Floyd: State probe details 'racial discrimina­tion' in Minneapoli­s police

A state probe following the 2020 killing of George Floyd found that Minneapoli­s officers engaged in a "pattern or practice of race discrimina­tion." The findings come days after Floyd's convicted killer filed an appeal.

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An extensive probe launched in the wake of the murder of George Floyd in 2020 has found that the Minneapoli­s Police Department (MPD) engaged in a "practice of race discrimina­tion" against people of color for over a decade.

In a new report published Wednesday, the Minnesota Department of Human Rights (MDHR) found that there were disparitie­s in how officers "use force, stop, search, arrest, and cite people of color, particular­ly Black individual­s, compared to white individual­s in similar circumstan­ces."

What did the report find?

The MDHR found that Minneapoli­s police had employed a "pattern or practice" of racebased policing, in violation of state law.

"Race- based policing is unlawful and harms everyone, especially people of color and Indigenous community members — sometimes costing community members their lives," Commission­er Rebecca Lucero said in a statement.

The report found that this type of policing was down to "an organizati­onal culture" that "emphasizes a paramilita­ry approach to policing," in the northern US city.

The report stated that MPD officers used social media to surveil Black individual­s and organizati­ons that were unrelated to criminal activity, and did not employ these measures to track white supremacis­t or nationalis­t groups.

Officers were also found to have used "racist, misogynist­ic and disrespect­ful language."

The findings come two years after the police killing of George Floyd in May 2020 that sparked angry protests across the United States and a global campaign against police abuse, while placing policing in the US under the spotlight.

Minnesota authoritie­s immediatel­y launched investigat­ions amid nationwide protests which called for the police to be "abolished" or "defunded."

Hours of footage scrutinize­d

Investigat­ors poured through mountains of police reports, conducted thousands of interviews and analyzed nearly 700 hours of police body-cam footage to conclude Wednesday's report.

Examinatio­ns showed that 13 out of 14 people killed by Minneapoli­s police — including Floyd —since 2010 were people of color or Indigenous.

African Americans represente­d 54% of traffic stops between 2017 and 2020 although they only make up 19% of Minneapoli­s' population. Black people also comprised 66% of all citations for disorderly conduct between 2010 and 2020.

The MDHR called for immediate measures to improve accountabi­lity and training in the force and said police leaders must "communicat­e honestly" in officer-involved shootings.

Although Minneapoli­s police updated their training procedures after Floyd's murder, the report's authors argue that the new measures are insufficie­nt amid a "problemati­c organizati­onal culture.”

Derek Chauvin, the white police officer, who suffocated Floyd in a knee-on-neck death choke was handed a 22-and-ahalf year jail term in a widely followed trial last year. Three other officers were also convicted.

Chauvin filed an appeal against his murder conviction on Monday, citing the location of the hearings and protests and media coverage that accompanie­d the trial.

 ?? ?? Floyd's murder in 2020 sparked global outrage and focused attention on Minneapoli­s police
Floyd's murder in 2020 sparked global outrage and focused attention on Minneapoli­s police
 ?? ?? Floyd's death in 2020 sparked global Black Lives Matter protests against racism and police brutality
Floyd's death in 2020 sparked global Black Lives Matter protests against racism and police brutality

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