This has to stop.
As editorialists we value even-tempered responses to the maddening events around us, but as citizens we cannot deny the anguish of being joined to a city whose commitment to justice is undermined again and again and again. It has to stop.
Yet another Twin Cities family is mourning the death of a young Black man at the hands of police, once again captured on a traumatic video that prompts more grief, more anger, more questions.
By now most Minnesotans have seen the images of a Minneapolis Police Department SWAT team quietly unlocking a door and entering a darkened downtown apartment just before 7 a.m. Wednesday. The officers then storm inside, shouting "Police, search warrant!" After a few seconds of chaotic shouting, veteran officer Mark Hanneman shoots 22-year-old Amir Locke, who had emerged from under a blanket holding a handgun.
Locke, who apparently had been sleeping on a couch in a relative's apartment, died 13 minutes later at nearby Hennepin County Medical Center. He had been shot twice in the chest and once in the wrist.
We've since learned that the MPD was executing a no-knock search warrant as part of a St. Paul murder investigation. Locke, like Breonna Taylor in 2020, was not the target of that probe. But he ended up being shot three times and dying.

The Star Tribune and other news media outlets have reported that St. Paul police had applied for a standard search warrant but that the MPD insisted that the raid be a no-knock operation. No-knock warrants are controversial, with critics arguing that they make police encounters more dangerous — as in the shooting death of the innocent Taylor in Louisville, Ky. — and with some in policing maintaining that they are necessary to protect cops and evidence.
Minneapolis restricted no-knock raids as one of its policing reforms in the wake of George Floyd's 2020 death, requiring that officers announce their presence before crossing the threshold of a residence. The Star Tribune reported that the MPD has obtained at least 13 no-knock or nighttime warrants this year, and that another seven no-knock warrants have been carried out at city addresses by other law enforcement agencies. There are likely to have been more, because — as in the case of the investigation that led to Locke's death — some warrant applications are filed under seal.