Minneapolis police leaders used a secretive process to handle serious officer misconduct cases while keeping the details confidential, despite repeated claims to the contrary.
In public meetings and statements to media, police and city officials long claimed they use coaching, a form of one-on-one mentoring, in response only to the lowest-level policy violations, like uniform infractions or not wearing a seatbelt. But new court documents reveal that some of the misconduct quietly coached in recent years is more severe.
Three officers mishandled their service weapons, one of whom fired a round into the wall of a precinct.
Another failed to report a colleague’s use of force, which resulted in injury to an individual in their custody.
And another, who has since been promoted, let a police K-9 off leash, allowing the dog to attack a civilian.
All were coached, the documents say, meaning all records of the misconduct were shielded from public view.
The Minneapolis Police Department has used coaching more than any other means of dealing with police complaints over the past decade. Attorneys for the city say this gentler form of corrective action doesn’t amount to real discipline, and they don’t have to disclose any records to the public under Minnesota law. Critics have for years contended that the lack of transparency amounts to a rhetorical loophole the police department uses to keep bad behavior hidden.
Last year, in charging Minneapolis with a pattern of discriminatory policing, the U.S. Department of Justice criticized coaching as part of the city’s “fundamentally flawed” accountability system. Only one in four cases referred for coaching through a city oversight office ended up being coached, the charges say, and some allegations were “far from ‘low-level,’” including an officer who “smacked, kicked, and used a taser on a teen accused of shoplifting.”