Albany Times Union

Minnesota files complaint against police

Floyd’s death to be probed as human rights violation

- By Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti Floyd

The state of Minnesota filed a human rights complaint Tuesday against the Minneapoli­s Police Department in the death of George Floyd by an officer who pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for minutes, even after he stopped moving.

Gov. Tim Walz and the Minnesota Department of Human Rights announced the filing at a news conference Tuesday afternoon.

Widely seen bystander video showing Floyd’s death has sparked sometimes-violent protests around the world. The officer, Derek Chauvin, has been fired and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er. Three other officers involved were fired but have not been charged.

“We know that deeply seated issues exist,” the governor said. “I know it because we saw the casual nature of the erasing of

George Floyd’s life and humanity. We also saw the reaction of the community. They expected nothing to happen, because nothing happened so many times before.”

Walz said the investigat­ion into the police department’s policies, procedures and practices over the past 10 years will determine if the force has engaged in systemic discrimina­tion toward people of color, and will work out how to stop it. State Human Rights Commission­er Rebecca Lucero will lead the investigat­ion.

Lucero’s department will seek an agreement from Minneapoli­s city leaders and the police department to immediatel­y implement interim measures, followed by longterm measures to address systemic discrimina­tion.

The FBI is also investigat­ing whether police willfully deprived Floyd of his civil rights.

Spokesmen for the police department and the mayor’s office didn’t immediatel­y respond to messages seeking comment. The Minneapoli­s City Council planned to issue a statement on the investigat­ion later Tuesday.

The department enforces the state’s human rights act, particular­ly as it applies to discrimina­tion in employment, housing, education, public accommodat­ions and public services. Mediation is one of its first-choice tools, but the cases it files can lead to fuller investigat­ions and sometimes end up in litigation.

The Minneapoli­s Police Department has faced decades of allegation­s of brutality and other discrimina­tion against African Americans and other people of color, even within the department itself. Critics say its culture resists change, despite the elevation of Medaria Arradondo as its first black police chief in 2017.

Arradondo himself was among five black officers who sued the police department in 2007 over alleged discrimina­tion in promotions, pay, and discipline. They said in their lawsuit that the department had a history of tolerating racism and discrimina­tion. The city eventually settled the lawsuit for $740,000.

Earlier Tuesday, an attorney for Floyd’s family again decried the official autopsy that found his death was caused by cardiac arrest as police restrained him and compressed his neck. The medical examiner also listed fentanyl intoxicati­on and recent methamphet­amine use, but not as the cause of death.

A separate autopsy commission­ed for Floyd’s family concluded that he died of asphyxiati­on due to neck and back compressio­n.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States