![]() “Nobody in the job or working on the job can blame those officers for being less aggressive.” “There isn’t a huge appetite for aggressive police work out there, and the risk/reward, certainly, we’re there and we’re sworn to protect and serve, but you also have to protect yourself and your family,” said Scott Gerlicher, a Minneapolis police commander who retired this year. Some in the city, including police officers themselves, say the men and women in blue stepped back after Floyd’s death for fear that any encounter could become the next flashpoint. ![]() They approached fewer people they considered suspicious and noticed fewer people who were intoxicated, fighting or involved with drugs, records show. REUTERS/Carlos BarriaĪlmost immediately after Floyd’s death, Reuters found, police officers all but stopped making traffic stops. SOMBER: The George Floyd Memorial honoring the victim of tortuous police brutality. In the interim, an examination by Reuters found, Minneapolis’ police officers imposed abrupt changes of their own, adopting what amounts to a hands-off approach to everyday lawbreaking in a city where killings have surged to a level not seen in decades. Officials here floated attempts to overhaul, shrink or even abolish the city’s besieged police force – so far with no success. In the months that followed, few cities wrestled more with the question of what the future of American law enforcement should be than Minneapolis. The video-recorded killing of a defenseless Black man touched off rioting, rekindled a national debate about racial inequities in law enforcement and launched scattershot efforts to strip funding from police. Policing in Minneapolis changed dramatically in the year since a white police officer murdered George Floyd. ![]() “They’re just going to let everybody kill themselves.” The gunfire was part of a wave of shootings this year in Minneapolis, where killings are on the rise and, Earthman and others complain, the police are frequently nowhere to be seen. One severed a bone in her 19-year-old son’s arm. The shots sheared through the door of the living room where her children were playing. Bullets crashed through the walls of Brandy Earthman’s house on Minneapolis’ north side one evening this summer.
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