Hoping to stem retaliatory shootings this summer, the Minneapolis police department is launching a new unit solely focused on gang-related crime.
Chief Janeé Harteau announced the change Wednesday during a City Council briefing about summer crime strategies. Details were sparse Wednesday, but she said the unit would consist of five officers and one sergeant.
"When we have an incident that occurs, we will have a team of people that can go out and understand who is shooting at who," Harteau said in an interview. "And our goal is to prevent the next shooting."
Dozens of shootings and several homicides in recent weeks have been linked to gang-related disputes. Harteau said the team would be regularly tracking gang activity, freeing up others in the department to handle 911 response and community engagement.
"As we look at violent crime in this city, there still is a percentage done by our street-level gangs," Harteau said. "And in order to have a proper immediate response to that and try to prevent the next shooting, we need to have a group ... [whose] function is to specifically address those issues."
In addition to the Metro Gang Strike Force, which was a metrowide effort, the city at one point had a gang-specific unit. But department spokesman Scott Seroka said it was eliminated in May 2013.
Harteau said the new unit would have a citywide focus, rather than limiting itself to certain areas.
Council President Barb Johnson, who represents the northern half of the North Side, applauded the initiative.