Hours after a pair of overnight shootings Monday in Minneapolis' Warehouse District left six people wounded, fed-up city and police officials unveiled new anti-crime programs aimed at cooling some notorious hot spots — among them just outside the First Precinct police station doors in the heart of downtown.
Authorities said the shootings appeared to be tied to an escalating gang war.
"This morning's shootings in downtown Minneapolis are unacceptable. This is not who we are as a city," said Mayor Betsy Hodges in announcing the new efforts, which include an intervention program that focuses on the relatively small percentage of chronic offenders who commit the bulk of violent crimes. "Gun violence anywhere in this city is unacceptable — it's unacceptable on the North Side and it is unacceptable downtown."
Hodges said the approach "will call in the offenders who are at the highest risk of perpetrating violence" and "offer them every resource they need to redirect their lives productively, and hold them accountable if they do not."
She said the program, which had proved successful in other cities, would be funded in part by a $250,000 U.S. Department of Justice grant, in addition to money set aside in next year's budget.
Hodges offered few other details about the new program, promising periodic updates through the fall. She added that, if passed, her 2017 budget would increase the department's authorized strength by 15 officers next year.
Faces are often familiar
She was joined at a midday news conference by Police Chief Janeé Harteau, who said that her officers had noticed an ominous trend: the same faces over and over again at shooting scenes.
"I get shocked when we have a victim or a suspect of a shooting who doesn't have a criminal history," she said.