The Biden administration announced that communities experiencing a surge in gun violence can use American Rescue Plan funding to rehire police officers to pre-pandemic levels, pay overtime, upgrade technology and boost prosecution of gun crimes.
The White House also declared Wednesday that the administration will convene a Community Violence Intervention Collaborative of 15 jurisdictions, including Minneapolis and St. Paul, that are committing to use a portion of their COVID-19 relief to address summer violence.
Over the next year and a half, the administration will meet with local officials as part of that collaborative.
"Our country is experiencing an epidemic of gun violence, and Minneapolis isn't immune to it. My proposal for the first wave of federal rescue plan funding features a strong commitment to violence prevention and intervention work in addition to resources for law enforcement," said Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey in a statement. "We're grateful for the White House's commitment to working directly with local governments to curb gun violence."
The number of Minneapolis gunshot victims has increased 90% from last year, while violent crime arrests have dropped by a third, according to police statistics.
According to a White House news release, the U.S. Marshals Service is conducting nationwide fugitive sweeps of people wanted for homicides, rapes and aggravated robbery. The Drug Enforcement Agency, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the FBI are also embedded with local law enforcement investigating criminal organizations as part of the Justice Department's Comprehensive Strategy for Reducing Violent Crime in cities nationwide.
Last month, Hennepin and Ramsey County deputies serving on a U.S. marshals task force shot and killed Winston Boogie Smith Jr. as they attempted to take him into custody on a warrant for being a felon in possession of a gun, leading to weeks of protests in Uptown. The yet-unidentified officers were not wearing body cameras during the shooting , allegedly due to U.S. Marshals Service policy, raising questions about the transparency of federal task forces.
Minneapolis will not be partnering with federal law enforcement in the violence intervention collaboration, said Frey's spokeswoman Tara Niebeling. But "as a participating jurisdiction, our team will receive technical assistance from the administration and be given access to national leaders in the conversation around public safety and the rise in gun violence across the nation," she said.