Police brutality cause for ballot issue

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The Committee For Professional

Policing is working to pass an amendment to the Minneapolis City

Charter, which would be voted on as a ballot issue in the November

2014 election. This amendment would require police officers to carry

personal liability insurance, much like the malpractice insurance

doctors are required to carry.

CFPP officially formed as a

political committee in the spring of 2013. The original idea for the

liability insurance model came from Communities United Against Police

Brutality, an all-volunteer organization founded in 2000 which

focuses on advocacy, education and political activity to end police

brutality in Minneapolis and the surrounding metro areas.

According to statistics gathered by

CFPP, the City and its taxpayers have spent $20 million on police

misconduct payouts since 2006.

“Right now, the city covers pretty

much all acts of misconduct by police officers, but it’s not actually

required to do so,” explained Dave Bicking, the Chair of CFPP.

This means that officers are covered

only arbitrarily by the city’s current provisions.

“This is not an anti-cop deal by

any means,” said Michelle Gross, President of CUAPB. “It is a way

to get rid of the bad officers and keep and protect the good ones.”

According to Bicking, the impetus

for the charter amendment comes from a long history of issues with

holding police officers accountable for misconduct.

“We’ve been frustrated with the

fact that the city politicians, the police chief and the union really

have no interest in disciplining officers or holding them to account

for their conduct,” Bicking said. “All that’s been effective is

lawsuits. While those are important to get some kind of compensation

to the victims, they do very little to solve the underlying problem

of preventing future problems, because the payments are made by the

taxpayers.”

Under the charter amendment, the

city would pay the base insurance rate covering officers, while any

insurance premiums brought on by “risky” conduct would be covered

by the officers themselves.

Bicking likened the proposal to car

insurance.

“If you’re a really, really bad

driver, it becomes too expensive to drive or even own a car anymore,”

said Bicking. “Similarly, some officers would become uninsurable,

and that would finally get those officers off the force.”

Such police misconduct is difficult

to track using data, since no centralized agency is responsible for

keeping it.

“Statistics about police brutality

not collected by the police,” said Gross “No cities keep this

data in any real way. The FBI is mandated to keep this data, but no

one really does it. So it’s this big problem that everyone knows

about, but nobody wants to quantify.”

However, CUAPB tracks data that

comes through their 24 hour hotline. From 2001-2006, CUAPB recorded

464 cases for analysis. Of these cases, 92 percent cited an

infringement of First Amendment rights, 56.6 percent cited justice

system misuse, and 56 percent cited unjustified force. Of these

hotline callers, 67 percent were African American and 16 percent were

other or unspecified.

Given the general dearth of

statistics available, it is difficult to pin down exactly how these

policies are affecting the Native American community in Minneapolis.

However, according to a national study conducted by the United States

Commission on Civil Rights, the Native American incarceration rate is

38 percent higher than the national average. The study cited racial

profiling, lack of access to legal counsel and disproportionate

police contact as the underlying causes of this disparity.

Both CUAPB and CFPP would like to do

more to engage volunteers and activists from the Native community. In

order to make the charter amendment a ballot issue in the 2014

election, CFPP will need to gather 15,000 petition signatures by May

of 2014. To get involved as a volunteer to collect signatures, help

with fundraising or do media and publicity work, please contact CFPP

organizers at 612-715-8784 or on their Web site at

cfppmpls.wordpress.com.