The Trump administration is ending federal involvement in reforming local police departments, reversing efforts initiated after the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. This action includes canceling proposed settlements with Louisville, Kentucky, and Minneapolis, Minnesota, that would have placed those cities under federal oversight.
The United States Department of Justice announced the cancellation of two proposed settlements with Louisville and Minneapolis, which would have mandated federal oversight of their police departments. Additionally, the Justice Department withdrew reports on six other local police departments – Phoenix, Arizona; Memphis, Tennessee; Trenton, New Jersey; Mount Vernon, New York; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; and the Louisiana State Police – that had identified patterns of discrimination and excessive violence.
The Trump administration framed the decision as a shift towards greater responsibility for individual cities and states. An assistant attorney general at the Justice Department, Harmeet Dhillon, argued that federal oversight of local police is a waste of taxpayer funds and lacks accountability and local control. She suggested the administration would consider rescinding existing consent decrees, a process requiring judicial approval.
Civil rights leaders and police reform advocates expressed strong opposition to the move, particularly given its timing just days before the fifth anniversary of George Floyd’s murder. Reverend Al Sharpton criticized the decision as a “moral retreat” that signals police departments are “above scrutiny.”
George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020, sparked widespread protests after a video showed a police officer, Derek Chauvin, kneeling on his neck for over nine minutes. Breonna Taylor, a Louisville medical worker, was fatally shot in her apartment on March 13, 2020, after police executed a no-knock warrant. These deaths, along with others, fueled nationwide unrest and the Black Lives Matter movement.
Following the deaths of Floyd and Taylor, the Justice Department under President Joe Biden initiated 12 “pattern-or-practice” investigations into local police departments. These investigations aimed to determine if incidents of police brutality were isolated events or indicative of broader systemic issues. The investigations in Minneapolis and Louisville revealed patterns of discriminatory policing.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey stated his commitment to upholding the city’s existing police reform plan and consent decree. Louisville Metro Police Department Chief Paul Humphrey indicated the department would seek an independent monitor to oversee reforms, emphasizing that the commitment to better policing extends beyond any formal settlement.
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