Los Angeles Times

Minneapoli­s voters weigh fate of police

Ballot measure would replace the embattled department with a unit for public safety.

- By Kurtis Lee and Deena Winter Lee reported from Los Angeles, and Winter, a special correspond­ent, reported from Minneapoli­s.

MINNEAPOLI­S — The council members stood shoulder to shoulder in a city park adorned with massive letters reading “Defund Police.”

Days earlier, George Floyd had been murdered a few blocks away by a Minneapoli­s police officer, unleashing protests nationwide. Now, hundreds of protesters had gathered in the park. They wanted justice. They wanted accountabi­lity. They wanted reform.

“We should and can abolish our current Minneapoli­s police system,” Councilwom­an Alondra Cano said at the time.

On Tuesday, more than a year after Floyd’s death, voters in Minneapoli­s will decide whether to replace the city’s embattled Police Department with a new Department of Public Safety, an effort that, should it pass, could lead to similar measures in other cities.

If voters approve, the Police Department and office of chief would be removed from the city charter, and a minimum funding requiremen­t would be eliminated.

The new department, which could still include police officers, would be led by a commission­er nominated by the mayor and appointed by the City Council.

Not detailed in the ballot language is exactly what the new department would do or specifics of how it would operate. Many of these questions will be answered by the mayor and City Council if the measure passes. Funding for the department would still come from the city — the total to be determined, as it is now, by elected city officials.

For months, residents of Minneapoli­s, where violent crime has surged recently, have battled over whether to support Question 2. Most everyone here agrees that policing needs to change — it’s impossible to watch the video of Floyd’s final breath and think otherwise, critics say — but they’re split on how that should happen, especially in the aftermath of nationwide demonstrat­ions demanding that department­s reform even as they angered many police officers who felt unfairly vilified.

It’s a debate that has divided Democratic politician­s, who hold most of the political power in Minnesota and its largest city. Progressiv­es like U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar and state Atty. Gen. Keith Ellison, who successful­ly prosecuted former Minneapoli­s Police Officer Derek Chauvin in Floyd’s murder, support the measure.

“Now more than ever, we need to drive a conversati­on in Minneapoli­s about how we can have both safety and human rights, both a feeling of security and a feeling of hope,” Ellison wrote in a recent Minneapoli­s Star Tribune op-ed. “The vote on the charter amendment gives us that opportunit­y.”

Moderate Democrats in Minnesota, including U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Gov. Tim Walz, oppose the measure, as do Minneapoli­s Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat who is up for reelection, and Minneapoli­s Police Chief Medaria Arradondo.

At a news conference last week, Arradondo said that “to vote on a measure of reimaginin­g public safety without a solid plan and an implementa­tion or direction of work — this is too critical of a time to wish and hope for that help that we need so desperatel­y right now.”

For much of the last year, Frey and Arradondo have touted wide-ranging policy changes, including bans on police chokeholds or neck restraints and a requiremen­t that officers intervene if a colleague uses improper force. Even so, the U.S. Department of Justice this year opened an investigat­ion into the training, tactics and discipline of the Minneapoli­s police force.

“Building trust between community and law enforcemen­t will take time and effort by all of us, but we undertake this task with determinat­ion and urgency, knowing that change cannot wait,” U.S. Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland said at the time.

A September poll by the Star Tribune of 800 likely voters found that 49% supported replacing the Minneapoli­s Police Department with a department of public safety; 41% were opposed, and 10% were undecided.

Early voting began in September.

Jamar Nelson, 43, who lives on the predominat­ely Black north side of Minneapoli­s, understand­s why some want to re-create a city public safety system: He still bears a scar after being beaten by police who raided his apartment in 2000.

“For quite a long time, I was anti-police,” he said.

Nelson is a member of the local group A Mothers Love Initiative, which works with families of victims of gun violence. While he supports reforming the police, as well as reexaminin­g how mental health crises are handled, he is fearful about what could happen if the measure passes.

In his neighborho­od, he has recently seen more gunfire, robberies and traffic violations — “straight lawlessnes­s,” he said. A friend lost her only son in a shooting at a convenienc­e store.

Nelson attributes the spiraling crime to a diminishin­g police force: The department has shrunk to 588 officers, down about 300 since Floyd’s killing, and not all of them work patrol. Some have left the department, citing post-traumatic stress disorder from the unrest after Floyd’s death and low morale within the ranks.

“That is ridiculous­ly scary,” Nelson said.

But others in the city see swift change as necessary.

D.A. Bullock, 51, a documentar­y filmmaker who also lives in north Minneapoli­s, supports Question 2. He has noticed a rise in violence but said the police have “never been readily available.”

In 2019, someone shot at a neighbor’s house — a “big and traumatic” moment for many in the neighborho­od, he said. The police arrived within about 15 minutes and taped off the area but didn’t seem interested in getting informatio­n from neighbors.

About a month ago, Bullock was driving home at night when a man fired a gun into the air. Bullock pulled over and watched. The agitated man jumped in his car and drove off. A police officer then drove by slowly, flashed a light and drove away.

“I feel like they’ve always treated north Minneapoli­s with kind of a disdain — like it’s our fault for living there,” Bullock said.

It feels to him, he said, as if police want residents to feel stressed, as though they’re living in chaos, so they’ll vote against the amendment out of fear.

“That’s an intentiona­l sort of disdain for people who live in the city,” he said. “Of trying to show us how much we need them and how much we should never dare to question.”

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? GEORGE FLOYD is memorializ­ed in Minneapoli­s following his murder by an officer, which sparked calls to abolish the Police Department. Minnesota Democrats are divided over a ballot measure on the issue.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times GEORGE FLOYD is memorializ­ed in Minneapoli­s following his murder by an officer, which sparked calls to abolish the Police Department. Minnesota Democrats are divided over a ballot measure on the issue.

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