21-05-2025
Minneapolis police consent decree "isn't going anywhere," says state human rights head
The Minnesota Department of Human Rights says its consent decree with the Minneapolis Police Department "isn't going anywhere" amid reports on Wednesday that the U.S. Department of Justice seeks to dismiss the federal decree.
CBS News reports the department is "ending Biden-era investigations and proposed police consent decrees" in Minneapolis and Louisville, Kentucky.
The news comes just four days before Minneapolis marks five years since George Floyd's murder by a now-former officer, which sparked global protests and became a major catalyst for police reform in the city and beyond.
In January, the Minneapolis City Council approved its decree with the Biden administration's department of justice, nearly two years after the police department approved a first-of-its-kind settlement agreement with the Minnesota's human rights department.
On Wednesday, Rebecca Lucero, commissioner of the state's human rights department, said the state's decree will stand irrelevant of what happens on the federal level.
"While the Department of Justice walks away from their federal consent decree nearly five years from the murder of George Floyd, our Department and the state court consent decree isn't going anywhere," Lucero said. "Under the state agreement, the City and MPD must make transformational changes to address race-based policing. The tremendous amount of work that lies ahead for the City, including MPD, cannot be understated. And our Department will be here every step of the way."
Lucero's office underlined that the decree won't be removed until the state's judiciary "determines that the City and MPD have reached full, effective, and sustained compliance with the terms of the agreement."
The federal decree had been held up in the courts since U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi took office.
In June 2023, Merrick Garland's justice department released a searing report following its investigation into Minneapolis police practices, saying the department had a pattern of using excessive force, including "unjustified deadly force," which was disproportionately used against the city's Black and Indigenous residents. The police department also discriminated against people of color and residents living with behavioral health disabilities, according to the report's findings.
Both the federal and state decrees require Minneapolis police to meet certain benchmarks before oversight can be eliminated, including use-of-force policy reforms, restricting the use of military-style tactics during protests and a ban on handcuffing children younger than 14.
Bondi's justice department accuses Garland's department of "wrongly equating statistical disparities with intentional discrimination," and relying on "flawed methodologies and incomplete data" while investigating Minneapolis and Louisville police.
"Overbroad police consent decrees divest local control of policing from communities where it belongs, turning that power over to unelected and unaccountable bureaucrats, often with an anti-police agenda," Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon wrote in a statement released on Wednesday.
The justice department also announced its civil rights division will stop Biden-era probes into several other police departments, including in Phoenix, Memphis and Oklahoma City.