Jacob Frey ran for mayor with a promise "to regain our citywide swagger." Aside from its sexist premise (the mayor at the time was a woman averse to showboating), the promise looks ever more grotesque in retrospect. Under Frey's leadership Minneapolis became known throughout the world as the place where racist cops apparently thought themselves free to murder and brutalize in broad daylight with impunity. Swagger, indeed.
Now we know from recently released bodycam footage that in the days following George Floyd's murder, police officers continued to view our residents as enemies to be indiscriminately hunted rather than people to be served ("Frey says bodycam footage 'galling,'" front page, Oct. 8). Meanwhile, Mayor Frey talks abstractly about "justice" and "reform" while showing zero backbone in standing up to the Police Federation, which our cops seem to take as their real boss.
A few days ago I attended a neighborhood meeting at which virtually everyone present had a story of the Minneapolis Police Department failing to take any effective action when help was needed following a theft or assault. If Minneapolis is to have any chance of redeeming itself in the eyes of the world, Frey must go, and we must create a new Department of Public Safety that actually serves the people rather than treating them as enemies to be subdued.
Jason McGrath, Minneapolis
POLICE REFORM
Harder than you think
The article on police-free emergency responses ("Police-free response created conflict," Oct. 8) reveals the difficulties in improving the function of bureaucracies. Over many months, there appear to have been genuine concerns, genuine misunderstandings, genuine inertia and some protecting their "silo."
This tale should be cautionary regarding the upcoming vote whether to adopt Minneapolis City Question 2 and the revision of methods for public safety. It seems simply irrational to go off into the unknown with blank-check permissions to the mayor and City Council, in unspecified roles, for deciding how to provide public safety and whether to have a Police Department "if needed."
If rather narrowly defined changes are as hard as they appear to have been in developing police-free emergency responses, imagine the duration of the chaos when all of public safety is tossed into a cocked hat.
John R. Priest, Minneapolis