Minneapolis Might Hire Outside Law Enforcement to Fight Rising Violent Crime

Minneapolis Police Department
by Scott McClallen

 

Five months ago, the Minneapolis City Council vowed to “dismantle” their police department.

But this week, the council voted 7-6 to advance a measure to temporarily hire between 20 and 40 additional officers from the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office and Metro Transit Police to respond to violent 911 calls.

The plan still needs final approval, with an expected vote on Friday.

The turnaround follows a record number of homicides in 2020.

The city has tallied roughly 74 homicides in the first 10-plus months of 2020, the Tribune reported, outpacing 48 in 2019.

Nearly 500 people have been shot this year while 100 officers have left the department to date in 2020, more than double the typical average.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, who opposed dismantling the police department, supported the idea.

“We’re not gonna be having these people out taking bicycle theft reports. These are going to be people out combating crime issues,” Minneapolis Police Department spokesperson John Elder told the Star Tribune.

The plan comes with an approximate price tag of $500,000, and would reimburse the Sheriff’s Office and Metro Transit Police for their officers through Dec. 31.

Earlier this year, eight Minneapolis residents sued the city council and Frey, claiming they are violating the City Charter requirement to fund a minimum Minneapolis Police Department force of 0.0017 employees per resident, or roughly 730 officers.

The lawsuit argued that the number of licensed police officers has dropped from 825 at the start of 2020 to about 634 to protect a 425,000-person city. The city has denied the allegation.

Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo, a 30-year veteran, stressed they need extra resources to stop a mounting violent crime wave.

“Our city is bleeding at this moment,” Arradondo said. “I’m trying to do all I can to stop that bleeding.”

“I’ve got almost 500 people who’ve been shot and wounded in this city,” Arradondo said. “We can go back and forth on the $185 million [budget], but that isn’t stopping the bloodshed that’s occurring every day in our city.”

Council member Lisa Goodman described how more officers could help protect one of her constituents who was beaten, robbed, carjacked and now fears for her life.

“This is not a perception of safety issue,” Goodman said. “Even a handful of more officers means calls will be responded to faster … and might free up time to investigate.”

Other members were skeptical of any change $500,000 would make when officers have already been targeting violent crime.

“So, we’re going to take a thing that has not been working very well and has not been addressing carjackings, has not been addressing the rise in violent crime … and say if we just do 5% more of it, that will get us to a better place,” Council member Steve Fletcher told Arradondo. “I’m struggling to get my head around why that is a good idea.”

About 90% of the $185 million budget is salaries and benefits, Arradondo said, and he’s not sitting “on a treasure chest.”

“If you choose to say no to these victims of crime, then please stand by that,” Arradondo told Fletcher. “I’m saying we need more resources today, and right now.”

– – –

Scott McClallen is a staff writer covering Michigan and Minnesota for The Center Square. A graduate of Hillsdale College, his work has appeared on Forbes.com and FEE.org. Previously, he worked as a financial analyst at Pepsi.
Photo “Minneapolis Police Officer” by Tony Webster. CC BY 2.0.

 

 

Related posts

Comments