DULUTH – Local activists are demanding change from the Police Department here after a data analysis revealed that people of color are involved in use-of-force incidents and arrested at disproportionately higher rates than white residents in the city.
Nonwhite residents make up 10% of Duluth's population, but half of individuals involved in use-of-force incidents in 2019 were people of color, according to Duluth Police Department (DPD) data.
Duluth arrests between 2017 and October 2020 also show a wide racial disparity, according to additional data obtained by LEAN Duluth, a grassroots network calling for police reform.
Among the more than 23,600 arrests made in that time, 16% involved Black people and 13% were Native Americans. Black residents comprise 2.3% of Duluth's total population, and Indigenous residents make up 1.6%. Those who identify as two or more races are 4.1% of the population, census data show.
"The Duluth Police Department has engaged in years of racially biased policing against Black, Indigenous and other people of color," Classie Dudley, president of the Duluth branch of the NAACP, said at a news conference Friday.
"By December of 2022, we expect DPD use of force and arrest rates to be proportionate to the racial demographics of our region," the Duluth NAACP said in a statement.
Treasure Jenkins, a community organizer who has lived in Duluth for 25 years, said in an interview that she regularly hears stories from Black community members — particularly younger men — who are "hassled by police" or face aggressive behavior from officers.
Jenkins serves on the board of the Clayton Jackson McGhie Memorial, which honors the lives of three Black men who were falsely accused of rape and lynched by a mob in Duluth in 1920.