Most Minneapolis residents said they believe that George Floyd's killing was not an isolated incident but reflects a broader problem with how the city's police treat Black people, according to a new Star Tribune/MPR News/KARE 11 Minnesota Poll.
That view was shared across racial lines, though white residents were more likely than Black residents to see his death as an example of structural flaws within the Minneapolis Police Department, the poll showed. The findings also showed that residents overwhelmingly believe that Black people and white people are not treated the same by the criminal justice system — a view shared by 96% of Black voters and 82% of white voters.
"It's rooted in systemic oppression of 400 years of suppressing Black people," said Undrea Patterson, 42, who is Black. She said that since Floyd's May 25 death in police custody, many Americans are beginning to face the reality that the criminal justice system is in many ways stacked against people of color. "We're still dealing with all these systems that were set up to keep Black people in a lesser capacity and not just as real participants in society," she said.
Patterson, who said her 15-year-old cousin Courtney Williams was fatally shot by police in 2004, said that she is more hopeful for change now because Floyd's death marked a watershed moment in the city's history.
The findings come as the embattled city of Minneapolis continues to grapple with a state investigation into allegations of human rights abuses by its officers and other fallout from the police killing of Floyd, which sparked protests against racial injustice and police brutality around the world.
Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo and Mayor Jacob Frey have promised significant reforms in hopes of building public trust, while saying that institutional change does not happen overnight. Meanwhile, some City Council members are pushing to dismantle the Minneapolis Police Department in favor of a new "transformative" public safety system, although a controversial charter amendment that would have opened the door for such a change has been shelved for now.
The poll was conducted for the news organizations by Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy Inc., which surveyed 800 registered Minneapolis voters last week, including 146 Black voters. In addition, 354 more interviews were conducted with Black registered voters in the city, for a total of 500. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.5% for the sample of 800 registered Minneapolis voters, and the margin of error for the sample of 500 Black Minneapolis registered voters is plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.
The citywide survey found a generational split on the national Black Lives Matter movement, with 88% of respondents ages 18-34 having a favorable opinion of Black Lives Matter. But support began to drop off some among those 65 and older, 71% of whom were in favor of the movement and its goals.