Fresh from news of her pending reappointment, Minneapolis Police Chief Janeé Harteau made the rounds of precinct houses on Sunday night.
The stops came two days after three people were killed in separate shooting incidents on the south and north sides and about two weeks after gunfire erupted downtown after bar close — leaving six people with noncritical injuries.
Before a scheduled 8:15 p.m. visit to Third Precinct headquarters on Lake Street and Minnehaha Avenue S., Harteau said she was "thankful for Mayor [Betsy] Hodges having confidence in my abilities, and I look forward to working together for the next three years. Although our work is not done, I am proud of what we have accomplished thus far."
Last Wednesday, Hodges announced she was reappointing Harteau to a second three-year term. In a news release, Hodges acknowledged she was making the announcement sooner than she had planned to due to speculation regarding the chief, who was first named to the job by former Mayor R.T. Rybak.
The Third Precinct was the scene of a deadly shooting about 5 p.m. Friday in the 2200 block of 10th Avenue S. Two people were dead as a result of what police spokesman John Elder described as a "targeted, isolated incident" that was domestic in nature and was believed to pose no threat to public safety.
Two people were taken into custody, with one considered a suspect and the other in protective custody.
"Even though it's domestic," Harteau said, "people can get scared" and may not be aware of information that has been reported.
The main concern, however, for the people who met with the chief on the corner of E. 22nd Street and 10th Avenue S. was not about their own safety but, in the words of one neighbor, "the mystery of what happened." On Friday, neighbors had said they witnessed the father in the home surrendering to police.