A little-known police licensure board that has come under fire for letting officers escape accountability is now at the center of Minnesota's attempt to build trust in law enforcement.
The Peace Officer Standards and Training Board emerged from the reckoning that followed the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd with a series of mandates intended to increase police accountability statewide. The Legislature tasked the board with bolstering its citizen oversight, setting a model use-of-force policy, creating a database to track officer misconduct, discouraging warrior-style training and developing autism training requirements.
Those new responsibilities are part of what interim POST Board Executive Director Erik Misselt calls a "watershed moment" for a licensing authority that has seen relatively little change since it was created in 1977. Misselt recently asked an international organization to audit the board's police education, training and regulatory processes and see how they stack up against other states.
And last week the board agreed to conduct a comprehensive overhaul of its standards and training rules.
"If you want to reform policing, you have to reform the POST Board," Board Chairwoman Kelly McCarthy said, because without the board changes, police practices in Minnesota would be local and piecemeal. "It really is the best place to make those statewide standards."
However, McCarthy said the board she helms is not in a position to ask for the public's trust. The POST Board hasn't "put our best foot forward in the past," she said, and needs to earn public trust by holding officers responsible and showing that members are addressing questions of racism in policing.
A Star Tribune investigation in 2017 found hundreds of officers had been convicted of crimes over the past two decades without losing their professional licenses. After that, the board changed its standards for which criminal offenses would prompt a reconsideration of officers' licensure.
Michelle Gross, with the advocacy group Communities United Against Police Brutality, said she is hopeful about McCarthy and Misselt's leadership. Her organization has criticized the board in the past and urged it to take a stronger role in police discipline. Currently that responsibility resides largely with the local agencies.