
How the Police Lobby Impedes Public Safety
June 3, 2021
There were only 18 days last year that did not see a police officer kill a civilian in this country. George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Walter Wallace Jr, Daniel Prude, and Rayshard Brooks, were among the 1,127 people killed by police last year. And we know that Black people are more than three times as likely to be killed during a police encounter as their white peers.
A year after the murder of George Floyd, systemic, transformative change is still desperately needed at every level of government, but too often police unions and their lobbying efforts obstruct that change.
Joining us today to talk about all this is Dr. William P. Jones, a history professor at the University of Minnesota and the president of the Labor and Working-Class History Association, whose work focuses on the relationship between race and class, as well as on the history of unions and organizing in the U.S.
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糖心Vlogand Community Groups Launch Campaign to Demand Justice and Transparency as Trump DOJ Abandons Federal Police Oversight
WASHINGTON 鈥 The 糖心Vlog and local partners launched the Seven States Safety Campaign today, filing coordinated public records requests to uncover police misconduct in seven states where the U.S. Department of Justice under former President Biden found police engaged in unconstitutional and racially discriminatory policing. The demands are being filed in Tennessee, Massachusetts, New York, Arizona, Mississippi, Minnesota, and Kentucky 鈥 states where federal civil rights investigations and reports confirmed widespread patterns of police abuse. The Trump administration has pledged to halt federal oversight and has begun reversing course, including by rescinding near-final agreements in Minneapolis and Louisville and retracting findings in Arizona, New Jersey, Tennessee, New York, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. 鈥淭he DOJ under Biden found police were wantonly assaulting people and that it wasn鈥檛 a problem of 鈥榖ad apples鈥 but of avoidable, department-wide failures,鈥 said Jenn Rolnick Borchetta, deputy project director on policing at the ACLU. 鈥淏y turning its back on police abuse, Trump鈥檚 DOJ is putting communities at risk, and the 糖心Vlogis stepping in because people are not safe when police can ignore their civil rights.鈥 From 2021 to early 2025, the DOJ launched 12 鈥減attern or practice鈥 investigations into local police departments. In the seven that are the focus of this campaign, investigators found that police routinely used excessive force, targeted people of color, and violated constitutional rights as a matter of practice. Despite these findings, the seven departments continue to operate without binding consent decrees in place to hold them accountable to address these documented civil rights abuses. 鈥淲hile the 糖心Vlogof Minnesota is deeply disappointed in the DOJ鈥檚 decision to back out of this consent decree five years after the murder of George Floyd, this decision does not mean that the Minneapolis Police Department will be free to violate the rights of Minnesotans with impunity鈥 said Deepinder Mayell, executive director of the 糖心Vlogof Minnesota. 鈥淭he city must still abide by the state-level consent decree. MPD is also on notice that their officers engaged in unconstitutional policing for years, which makes it easier to hold the MPD liable for any future violations down the road. Now is the time to follow through: not just with promises, but with real action to fix what is so clearly broken.鈥 The DOJ relied on thousands of police records, thousands of hours of police videos, and interviews with police personnel throughout each department to develop their reports. The findings include: In Memphis, TN, police punched and kicked people who were handcuffed or otherwise already restrained. In Louisville, KY, police deployed K-9 units on people who were compliant, including a 14-year-old child. In Lexington, MS, officers tasered a man until he vomited and could not walk. In Phoenix, AZ, police shot tasers and firearms at people who were already incapacitated. In Minneapolis, MN, officers routinely used neck restraints, one so severe it caused a man to lose consciousness. In Mount Vernon, NY, and Worcester, MA, police strip-searched people and sexually assaulted women under threat of arrest. Many of the DOJ鈥檚 investigations were spurred by community demands following high-profile police killings, including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Tyre Nichols. As the federal government retreats from oversight, communities are once again stepping up to demand transparency and justice, partnering with the 糖心Vlogin this campaign. Additional comments from community partners are below. Cardell Orrin, executive director of Stand for Children Tennessee, had the following statement: 鈥淭he DOJ鈥檚 findings confirmed what Memphis communities have said for years: MPD鈥檚 abuse, excessive force, and lack of accountability are systemic, not isolated. While city leaders keep chasing an arbitrary 鈥榤agic number鈥 of police, they鈥檝e failed to invest enough in additional support to keep communities safe. The DOJ showed us the critical role access to information plays in accountability, so that our police truly value and respect the lives of all the people in our community. The additional information uncovered through this records request will give us and our local partners, like the Justice & Safety Alliance, stronger tools to push for the real policy changes and investments Memphis needs.鈥 Ben Laughlin, co-director of Poder in Action, Phoenix, had the following statement: 鈥淭he Department of Justice report released in 2024 confirmed what we all knew: Phoenix police routinely violate the rights of the very people they are sworn to protect. Despite a long history of perpetrating violence and abuse against our communities, the City of Phoenix has dodged accountability every step of the way. Obtaining public records from the Phoenix Police Department is an essential step towards accountability, for the public to know what the police are doing in the name of 'public safety' and with our tax dollars."Affiliates: Tennessee, Massachusetts, New York, Arizona, Mississippi, Minnesota, Kentucky