In the decade leading up to the murder of George Floyd, Minneapolis mayoral administrations failed to deliver on promises to reform the culture of the city's police department.
Police chiefs allowed internal investigation findings to stack up, waiting more than 200 days in some cases to make decisions on officer discipline.
City and police leadership undermined their own reform efforts by "providing inaccurate or misleading information to the public," sowing distrust with the communities they serve.
Last week, the Minnesota Department of Human Rights published these details among the findings of its two-year civil rights investigation into the Minneapolis Police Department. The 72-page report portrays how the shortcomings of political and MPD leadership allowed a culture of racist policing to flourish. It does not call out leaders by name, but the bulk of the report covers a 10-year period beginning in 2010, which includes the tenure of mayors R.T. Rybak, Betsy Hodges and Jacob Frey, three police chiefs and as many City Council iterations.
These leaders knew of systemic racism and lack of accountability in the department, but they collectively failed to act with the "urgency, coordination, and intentionality" necessary to fix it, the investigation found.
"In the vacuum of collective action from key City and MPD leaders, the organizational culture at MPD has existed unchecked," the report said.
The report cites the city's communication about the Feb. 2 killing of Amir Locke during a no-knock warrant search as an example of how misinformation harms reform efforts. City leaders had announced a new policy on no-knock warrants in 2020, giving the false impression that police had eliminated this practice entirely. Police later inaccurately referred to Locke as a "suspect" and released images "to further paint Mr. Locke as a suspect."
Frey, who became mayor in 2018, acknowledged this week that "there have been so many instances in the past where investigation has been conducted, findings have been had, recommendations have been given and then the action ultimately fell short."