The city of Richfield and the state's largest police union squared off Thursday at the Minnesota Court of Appeals over the firing of officer Nate Kinsey and the proper handling of police misconduct.
The case is a significant test of Minnesota's decades-old system for using arbitrators to settle the labor disputes of public employees as a faster, cheaper alternative to court battles.
Its use by law enforcement, in particular, has come under scrutiny amid recent controversies involving police misconduct and discipline. Richfield has called the system "broken and flawed," one that keeps problem officers on the street — a position backed by the Minnesota Association of Chiefs of Police.
Still, Richfield is seen as the underdog in the case because Minnesota law offers few reasons that allow courts to overturn arbitration awards. Cities seldom challenge such awards.
Richfield officials fired Kinsey in 2016 after cellphone video of the officer striking a local teenager in the back of the head during a confrontation in a city park was spread widely on the internet. Kinsey did not report the incident, a violation of department rules.
The incident prompted a meeting among Richfield police officials, the family of the young man and Omar Jamal, head of the Somali Human Rights Commission.
In brief oral arguments Thursday morning, a labor attorney for Richfield asked the judges to vacate a lower court's ruling that upheld an arbitration order to give the fired officer his job back. Kinsey had been counseled repeatedly about inadequate report writing and use of force, Marylee Abrams told the panel of three judges.
Forcing Richfield to reinstate Kinsey would violate clear public policies that require cities to safeguard their citizens and require officers to report when they use force, Abrams said. The city didn't even know about the incident until it went viral, Abrams told the judges. Police cannot fulfill their profession's obligation to self-regulate, she argued, if they don't write the required reports documenting use of force.