The Denver Post

Support for investigat­ion of police

- By Jessica Seaman

Denver’s public safety director and police chief say they will support an independen­t investigat­ion into the city’s police department as officers face scrutiny for their tactics during recent protests for racial justice.

Earlier in the week, members of the City Council called for such an investigat­ion amid complaints that law enforcemen­t officers are targeting peaceful protesters, onlookers and journalist­s with pepper balls, chemical sprays and nonlethal projectile­s.

Public Safety Executive Director Murphy Robinson and Police Chief Paul Pazen said in a joint letter to council members that they will work with the Office of the Independen­t Monitor in its review of the agency.

“This has been an unpreceden­ted event in our city,” they wrote in the letter dated June 5.“We believe it is important to thoroughly review and learn from these events to ensure we are partnering with and protecting the Denver community in the best way possible.”

For more than a week, protests have taken place in Denver and cities across the nation after the death of George Floyd, a black man who was killed in Minnesota after a white police officer pressed a knee to his neck.

On some nights, the protests have turned violent. Likewise, police have come under scrutiny for their use of force during the protests. One officer was fired for writing “Let’s start a riot” on social media.

The police department has opened an internal investigat­ion after a video circulatin­g online showed officers firing pepper balls at a man standing beside his car and shouting that his pregnant girlfriend was inside.

On Friday evening, a federal judge in Denver also ordered police to limit their use of chemical weapons and nonlethal projectile­s on protesters, saying “the threat to physical safety and free speech outweighs the threat to property.”

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