A divided Minneapolis City Council committee on Tuesday decided to seek help from state lawmakers to crack down on threats against them and near-takeovers of council meetings by protesters.
The tense discussions came a week and a half after protesters so disrupted a meeting and accosted council members that three of them filed police reports alleging intimidation.
In those incidents, a group of protesters on the losing side of a series of votes forced a recess of the council when they shouted down council members with profanities and statements about their families while several reached over the dais where council members sat.
Shortly after, Council Member LaTrisha Vetaw and a member of her staff were followed in the skyway by an activist screaming profanities at them and, according to Vetaw's account, briefly trapping them on the top of a two-story escalator in an incident recorded by the activist, D.J. Hooker.
Vetaw on Tuesday said she has been granted a court restraining order against Hooker.
Also on Tuesday, St. Paul City Attorney Lyndsey Olson confirmed that her office is reviewing the matter, which was forwarded to them by Minneapolis city prosecutors. Such referrals are common in cases where a potential conflict of interest could exist.
At Tuesday's meeting, council members struggled between finding solidarity and empathy amid tensions in a group generally divided between two factions of left and more left — although a spectrum of members said they had personally been targeted with threats and bemoaned the state of affairs that holding office has come to engender.
In the end, a pair of split votes made it likely that the full council will officially ask for help from state lawmakers as soon as Thursday — although the likelihood that anything will happen at the Capitol this year is uncertain, several acknowledged.