The city of Minneapolis has agreed to pay nearly $1 million to settle a lawsuit by a man who suffered a traumatic brain injury after being assaulted by an off-duty police officer.
The settlement was reached at a City Council session Friday. During the discussion, Council President Lisa Bender broke from protocol to relay to viewers what she had told colleagues in private.
Bender, who has announced she will not run again, said she recognizes that some of her colleagues had "solid reasons" for wanting to settle the matter out of court, but she worried that doing so "is creating an environment where we're not motivated to take the actions that we need to take as a city" and that she would vote no.
"Having served for seven years and voted for many settlements, I find myself hearing over and over that the legal weaknesses we have as a city, that the potential legal risk that we have can be remedied by actions of reform and policy change," Bender said. "Yet the lawsuits keep coming. Yet the actions don't seem to be taken to change those policies and practices in a meaningful way so that we're not back in the same place again and again and again."
Still, the council voted 8-5 to approve the payment.
Bender's sentiments were echoed by Council Member Jeremiah Ellison, who like Bender has been among the strongest voices advocating for downsizing the city's police force. Ellison said he believes that continuing to sign off on settlements in police misconduct cases sends the message that officials are "accepting these kinds of incidents as simply the cost of doing business when it comes to public safety in Minneapolis."
"I have voted for settlements that felt wrong internally, but felt like the right thing to do economically, but [that haven't] led to the kind of change that we need," he said.
Bender's and Ellison's comments underscored how decisions that in the past might have been avoided or addressed with less emotion are being viewed in a new light since the May 25 death of George Floyd.