Minneapolis, DOJ and police
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The Trump administration announced the withdrawal of the plan just days before the five-year anniversary of George Floyd’s killing.
Minneapolis shows significant police reform progress in ELEFA's report, marking advances in policy development and handling past misconduct.
Progress toward more fair policing could be undermined by a push from some activists and lawmakers on the political right to get President Donald Trump to pardon Derek Chauvin, as his administration moves to end federal policing oversight.
Civil rights advocates condemn the Justice Department’s decision to exit police reform agreements in Louisville and Minneapolis, warning it could stall accountability and deepen public mistrust.
Top cop Brian O'Hara said in an interview with The New York Post that "bourgeois liberal mentality" prevents facts from breaking through in city's approach to policing.
On the heels of the DOJ announcement that it is ending it's consent decree with Minneapolis police, former chief Medaria Arradondo speaks to WCCO's Reg Chapman about changes the department has made since the murder of George Floyd and where he sees the department moving forward.
1don MSN
An 18-year-old from south Minneapolis is charged with eight felony counts after, police say, he tried to goad officers into chasing him while he drove erratically in a stolen Kia.
Minneapolis police made significant progress toward implementing reforms as required by a state-ordered settlement agreement, though the department did not meet all the goals laid out for year one of the process,