Acknowledging a lack of trust around investigations of Minnesota officers who use deadly force, the state's new public safety commissioner is among a growing set of law enforcement leaders now studying new approaches to such cases.
"We're not in crisis right now," Department of Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington said. "In my mind, this is the time to have that outreach, to have that conversation, because when you're in the middle of a crisis is the worst time to try to make friends."
Joining Harrington is Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman, who said early on in his latest four-year term that reevaluating officer-involved shooting probes is a top priority. And Attorney General Keith Ellison, not long removed from speaking out at the scene of police shootings, is willing to consider using his office to help prosecute those cases.
Meanwhile, some state lawmakers are again calling for creating a special prosecution board that would take police shooting investigations out of the hands of county attorneys.
The talks are taking place less than a month before the Hennepin County murder and manslaughter trial of former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor in the shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. He is just the second Minnesota police officer in recent memory to be tried for killing a civilian while on duty.
Harrington, a former Metro Transit and St. Paul police chief, and Ellison, a veteran congressman with a long history of civic activism, started examining the state's approach to police shootings when both took office in January.
"This is an issue that has the potential to get better if we talk about it," Ellison said. "I think that I'm in a good position to be part of this dialogue because I do appreciate the community perspectives, but I'm a prosecutor and so I have a prosecutor's perspective and I'm also working with law enforcement."
On the table for consideration would be designating the attorney general to appoint special assistant prosecutors from his office to oversee police shooting cases, something done in New York and which Freeman said he would be willing to consider.