MILWAUKEE, Wis. – Minneapolis Police Chief Janeé Harteau continued trying to build her reputation as a leader on the gun violence issue, telling law enforcement leaders from around the Midwest that they must improve regional cooperation.
"There are some alarming trends with gun violence, and we need to come together as a region to discuss strategies as these trends are not simply local issues," Harteau said Thursday. "We constantly have to ask ourselves 'What more can we do?' It drives us everyday, and it's brought us here to Milwaukee this week."
She told the roomful of police, prosecutors and gun experts that the stakes were high for law enforcement agencies if they fail to work together in getting firearms off the streets.
"The Midwest has the opportunity to really set the stage, set the tone and take a look at what are the next steps," she said.
Minneapolis has gained a reputation as a leader in curbing violence, highlighted when President Obama visited last year to praise the city's aggressive efforts as he pushed for tougher restrictions on gun ownership. But Harteau's comments came at an uncertain time back home as the city struggled with a wave of gun violence over the summer and mounting political pressure to get it under control. The chief has authorized overtime to beef up enforcement and is desperately trying to refill a depleted force hit by a wave of retirements.
The summit highlighted how the problems facing Minneapolis are similar to those in other cities.
Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn singled poverty, education and lack of job opportunities as just some of the social issues contributing to gun violence, most of which is concentrated in three of the city's poorest districts — where, as he put it, "there's the most overall social dysfunction."
Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, agreed that elected officials and police should work more closely together in "striking a balance between finding ways to intervene in gun violence and do it with the support of the community."