Frisbees and children's shouts careened across a makeshift disc golf course, part of National Night Out festivities in Edina's Morningside Neighborhood.
One hand on a plate of potluck supper and another on the stroller carrying her 6-month-old daughter, Jennifer Ede watched another of her kids clamber across a jungle gym. The lighthearted mood at Tuesday's event — dubbed Neighborhood Night Out in Edina— was a stark contrast for a part of the metro that had for two weeks been shaken by a tragedy.
The annual campaign to promote partnerships between communities and police was expected to draw thousands of neighbors to gatherings across the Twin Cities, with police and fire units expected to make the rounds to a number of them. More than 1,500 gatherings were registered in Minneapolis last year, the most among cities with populations greater than 300,000 nationwide.
This year's event came amid growing suspicion toward law enforcement from the communities they police.
In June, Jeronimo Yanez, a former St. Anthony officer, was acquitted by a jury in the shooting death of Philando Castile. On July 15, Justine Ruszczyk Damond was shot by a Minneapolis police officer behind her Fulton neighborhood home after calling 911 to report a possible sexual assault. Her death, which drew international headlines and led to the forced resignation of the city's police chief, occurred just 2 miles from where Ede stood on Tuesday.
As her neighbors socialized, Ede said she was grateful for the opportunity to meet new people in the neighborhood — especially families with kids her children's ages. Ede said she believes community partnerships with law enforcement are ultimately beneficial. "Whatever you could do to promote understanding of, you could say two sides, is positive."
There was little concern when a pair of St. Paul police officers strolled into the parking lot of St. Stephanus Lutheran Church to greet the several dozen people who gathered in the city's Frogtown neighborhood. But residents said they have noticed a trend in the area that's putting them on edge.
Ethan Du purchased a house several blocks away from the church hoping it would be a place to raise his family. On a recent night, though, after hearing several gunshots, he decided that in the next few years, after he's saved enough money, he'll move his family "someplace better."