Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Minnesota’s policing changes now law

- MOHAMED IBRAHIM

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Gov. Tim Walz signed a police accountabi­lity bill into law Thursday that includes a ban on neck restraints like the one that was used on George Floyd before his death in Minneapoli­s, though some activist groups say the legislatio­n falls short.

The bill, passed by the Legislatur­e earlier this week, also bans chokeholds and fear-based or “warrior-style” training, which critics say promotes excessive force. It imposes a duty to intercede on officers who see a colleague using excessive force and changes rules on the use of force to stress the sanctity of life.

“This bipartisan piece of legislatio­n moves us toward a critical step towards criminal-justice reform,” Walz said at a Thursday news conference. “These critical reforms are long overdue — they are meant to strengthen transparen­cy and community oversight.”

The measure also creates a new advisory council for the state board that licenses officers, makes changes in arbitratio­n rules affecting police unions and requires more training on dealing with people with mental-health issues and autism.

The bill passed after nearly two months of difficult negotiatio­ns that followed Floyd’s death on May 25 and the ensuing unrest that spread around the world over police brutality and racial injustice. Floyd, who was Black, was killed when a white officer held his knee to Floyd’s neck for nearly eight minutes as he was handcuffed and restrained by three other officers holding him down.

Members of the People of Color and Indigenous [POCI] Caucus led the policing overhaul efforts at the Capitol, speaking with community members and law enforcemen­t officials before drafting the legislatio­n they introduced last month. POCI Caucus member and House public safety committee chairman Rep. Carlos Mariani said the legislatio­n is the first step in preventing what happened to Floyd and Philando Castile, who was killed by a police officer in a St. Paul suburb four years ago.

“The constructi­on of this law and its passage is a powerful acknowledg­ment of our collective failure in the past, of our failure to [Floyd and Castile] and countless others who have been wrongfully harmed at the hands of peace officers,” Mariani said. “We have to start with that acknowledg­ment, otherwise we’ll continue to do what we’ve always done.”

Discussion­s on police accountabi­lity legislatio­n dominated the June special session a few weeks after Floyd’s death, but lawmakers weren’t able to reach a deal on which changes to include in the bill.

Going into this month’s special session, Democratic House Speaker Melissa Hortman said restoratio­n of felon voting rights and giving the Minnesota attorney general’s office primary jurisdicti­on over prosecutin­g police officers were two issues that were taken off the table in negotiatio­ns with the GOP-controlled Senate.

Michelle Gross, president of advocacy group Communitie­s United Against Police Brutality, called the changes in the bill “low hanging fruit” and said the legislatio­n is not nearly as comprehens­ive as the group had hoped.

“The autism training we

thought was an important thing to have … and we also like the fact that it bans fear-based training [which] is something we’ve been working on for quite a long time now,” she said. “But so much of what we wanted was not even given a second glance.”

Gross’ group, along with other advocacy organizati­ons, introduced eight policing bills during the special session — two of which were included in the package passed earlier this week.

The legislatio­n includes requiring police carry their own liability insurance, ending the statute of limitation­s for a wrongful-death civil suit and allowing families of those killed by police to see body camera footage 48 hours after the deaths. POCI Caucus members at the news conference Thursday pointed to the statute-of-limitation­s issue as a disappoint­ment when it failed to materializ­e in the final package.

Walz, a Democrat, is expected to call the Legislatur­e back to the Capitol in August to extend his peacetime emergency powers as the coronaviru­s pandemic continues indefinite­ly. Gross said that activists will be back with more changes to prevent lawmakers from moving on from police reform — a process that she said is far from over.

 ?? (AP/Star Tribune/Glen Stubbe) ?? Gov. Tim Walz signs into law a package of police accountabi­lity measures Thursday in St. Paul, making Minnesota the latest state to adopt changes in law enforcemen­t in the wake of George Floyd’s death.
(AP/Star Tribune/Glen Stubbe) Gov. Tim Walz signs into law a package of police accountabi­lity measures Thursday in St. Paul, making Minnesota the latest state to adopt changes in law enforcemen­t in the wake of George Floyd’s death.

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