Minneapolis Police Chief Janeé Harteau on Wednesday defended her decision to pull out of a recent community meeting and vowed to be deeply engaged with residents and critics.
"We need to provide platforms and opportunities for people to speak," Harteau said at a north Minneapolis news conference. "We will continue to do that."
Harteau spoke amid lingering criticism for not meeting with concerned residents and then for abruptly canceling her appearance at a potentially testy gathering last week. It also came after a string of shootings left at least three people dead and 16 wounded across the city, including a triple shooting early Tuesday at a south Minneapolis gas station.
Minneapolis police released a two-page handout showing the steps they have taken to reach out to the community and quell violence around the city.
Police have convened safety summits, paid overtime to beef up patrols in areas where crime has spiked, improved youth outreach and taken steps to get police out into the communities more. The department is also scrambling to hire new officers after a large wave of retirements depleted its ranks.
Harteau said her decision to bow out of a Sept. 18 community meeting on police accountability came after several tips on social media that the event could devolve into a nasty, even physical confrontation with police.
The chief said she worried that the possibility of a few passionate activists would have drowned out residents with their own concerns and questions.
She wanted to avoid a situation where "people who want to be heard don't get heard because the same people dominate the conversation," she said. "I want to hear from many people, and not just a few."