The Minneapolis City Council passed a resolution Friday calling on police to stop using tear gas, rubber bullets and other "less lethal" weapons to disperse crowds.
While the resolution doesn't affect law enforcement's discretion in using those tactics, the council's action nevertheless drew a sharp rebuke from Chief Medaria Arradondo and Mayor Jacob Frey.
In a public meeting, City Council members expressed deep concerns about the tactics used on protesters in Brooklyn Center following Daunte Wright's killing and said they wanted to see a less violent response to protests here.
Council Member Jeremiah Ellison said he believes less lethal weapons have been "consistently misused" in the past year, pointing to incidents where people were blinded or suffered skull fractures. He said he'd never seen them successfully disperse a crowd.
"They've always sort of bubbled into more chaotic situations and they've always created the atmosphere for folks to be … enraged," Ellison said.
Tensions are running high at City Hall as Minneapolis awaits the end of the murder trial for ex-officer Derek Chauvin, who is charged in George Floyd's death. Closing arguments are scheduled for Monday and are expected to draw protests.
Operation Safety Net, a coalition of state and local police agencies and National Guard members, has scaled up its presence in the city.
Minneapolis City Council members overwhelmingly passed a resolution Friday that calls on law enforcement leaders to "end the use" of less-lethal weapons to disperse crowds in Minneapolis. They described their resolution as a "statement of values."