On a recent Sunday afternoon, my 78-year-old mother in Bloomington called and said she was afraid of being carjacked. It's a call many of us are getting these days. Everyone, whether a senior citizen in the suburbs or a kid on a trampoline in north Minneapolis, deserves to feel — and to be — safe. And that isn't the case right now.
While we need fresh thinking to find effective solutions, as argued by a recent Star Tribune editorial, we must first agree on the problems. And for that, leaders need to come together for constructive conversations driven by data — and more than crime stats from a moment in time. The absence of comprehensive data designed to measure outcomes makes it all too easy to deflect blame and avoid accountability.
Lately, we've seen too many leaders deflecting blame.
As the daily fear of crime that has gripped some neighborhoods for years spills into neighborhoods unaccustomed to violence, people with power are scrambling to blame each other. The public is demanding answers, which makes the media willing to quote whoever will talk. And, for the past few months, it's been law enforcement doing the talking.
Police have a critical voice in this conversation. But the police talking points that have been the loudest lately are directed at an alleged "revolving door" for those who commit carjackings.
I have asked police chiefs I've met with during my campaign for county attorney what the revolving door means. Some have said the county attorney's bail policy allows people arrested for violent offenses to be released without bail. When I told them the policy only applies to first-time nonviolent property offenses, the response I received — from more than one chief — was, "Well, that's what I've heard."
We can't rely on rumors. We can't pinpoint a bail policy as the problem, while misstating the policy itself. There is a complex labyrinth of issues that lead to violence. It is unhelpful and reductive to claim it can all be solved with one, reactionary solution.
As a candidate for Hennepin County Attorney, I welcome the recent call from the Minnesota Chiefs of Police Association for more transparency and accountability from prosecutors' offices. But we need transparency from law enforcement as well.