A former Minneapolis police officer will be spared jail time after pleading guilty to assault and misconduct charges for beating a Black man amid civil unrest days after George Floyd's murder.
Justin Stetson entered guilty pleas to felony third-degree assault and gross misdemeanor misconduct of a public employee or officer for the 2020 beating of Jaleel Stallings. Stetson was originally charged with assault more than two years after the attack, but recently the Minnesota Attorney General's Office added the lesser charge, signaling a potential plea.
District Judge Shereen Askalani accepted Stetson's guilty pleas Wednesday. The agreement means Stetson will avoid jail time and the felony charge will be removed from his record if he successfully completes a two-year probation.

Terms of the deal require that Stetson enroll in an anger management class and write a letter apologizing to Stallings, who suffered a broken eye socket, spent days in jail and went on trial for attempted murder in the aftermath of the encounter with police on May 30, 2020. He was acquitted by a jury and won a $1.5 million settlement from the city. In Stallings' unsuccessful objection to the plea deal, he noted that he spent more time in jail than Stetson.
If Stetson remains offense-free and abides by all conditions of the plea, such as completing 30 to 90 days of community service, never seeking employment as an officer or possessing firearms, the felony charge will be dropped from his criminal record and the court will enter a conviction only for the misdemeanor.
Askalani will formally sentence Stetson on Aug. 9. Stallings, who now lives in Texas, plans to attend.
The Attorney General's Office said it could not disclose details of the plea until the hearing Wednesday morning. Attorney General Keith Ellison appeared for the hearing, but declined to take questions on why he found the plea acceptable.
In a written statement, Ellison called the outcome a historic accountability measure that bars Stetson from ever serving as a law enforcement officer in Minnesota again.