Mandated police reform progresses in Minneapolis
By Eleanor Steffen
The Minneapolis Police Department released the first progress reports of mandated police reform efforts initiated in 2023 on Monday, according to KSTP.
The reform efforts, a systemic response to the murder of George Floyd in 2020, are part of a court-ordered agreement with the Minnesota Department of Human Rights, with progress monitored by the organization Effective Law Enforcement For All (ELEFA), says KSTP. ELEFA's report determined that the Minneapolis Police Department had shown operational improvements, such as introducing public meetings and more extended requirements for training, says the station.
Along with the agreement, a federal consent decree further enforcing police reform was also settled between the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Department and the city of Minneapolis, according to ABC News. Despite this, the Trump Administration put a freeze on all agreements settled within the last 90 days, said the network on Friday. This freeze includes the Minneapolis consent decree.
The consent decree now must be approved by a federal judge in order to be implemented, says ABC.
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