►
From YouTube: September 15, 2020 City Council Study Session
Description
Additional information at
https://lims.minneapolismn.gov
D
C
D
C
B
Normally,
our
study
sessions
take
place
in
a
room
at
city
hall,
with
us
around
a
table
there's
space
for
the
any
members
of
the
public
who
who
want
to
be
there
and
they're
a
place
for
us
to
hear
from
staff
or
other
experts
to
ask
questions
and
to
really
have
more
time
than
we
often
do
during
our
regular
committee
structure.
B
To
hear
and
ask
questions
about
a
particular
topic.
So
today
we
will
have
time
to
dig
into
the
topics
that
were
covered
in
several
presentations
from
mayor
frye
to
the
council,
questions
around
public
safety
that
were
raised
by
council
members
and
in
those
sessions
those
presentations,
as
well
as
the
august
20th
policy
and
government
oversight
committee
meeting,
where
we
had
a
brief
presentation
from
chief
aradondo.
So
today,
we'll
have
we'll
hear
from
the
chief
and
from
it
as
well
as
have
plenty
of
time
for
questions
and
comments
from
council
members.
E
Oh
good
morning,
I
was
just
testing
to
make
sure
you
could
hear
me
good
morning.
Madam
chair
committee,
members,
madam
chair,
thank
you
so
much
for
arranging
this
study
session.
This
obviously
was
born
out
of
some
very
good
conversation
that
you
and
our
council
members
had
regarding
public
safety,
and
this
is
a
I'll
have
the
tech
persons
change
the
slide.
E
But
this,
madam
chair,
is
really
I'm
hoping
to
be
ongoing
opportunity
for
for
me
to,
and
my
staff
to
present
for
the
public
health
and
safety
committee,
which
is
the
regular
monthly
meeting
that
is
chaired
by
councilman
cunningham,
to
give
community
safety
reports
and
and
report
back
on
our
mpd
operations.
E
However,
this
study
session,
madam
chair,
as
you
mentioned,
is
a
more
of
a
a
deeper
dive
which
will
explore
reform
measures
and
improvements
within
the
mpd,
also
any
major
policy
changes
and
how
we're
working
in
terms
of
that
community
safety
with
our
other
collaborative
enterprise
partners.
So
again
I
wanna
thank
you,
madam
chair
and
the
committee
members
for
allowing
me
this
opportunity.
E
I
also
want
to
just
note
that
I
suppose
this
would
be
a
couple
of
house
cleaning
items.
There
was
a
staff
directive
by
the
committee
to
receive
it
was
requested
to
receive
the
approved,
off-duty
business
site
list.
That
was
that
was
directed
by
staff
to
provide,
and
I
believe
the
city
clerk
has
made
or
will
make
that
available
for
all
committee
members.
So
I
wanted
to
make
note
of
that
also.
E
I
do
hope
that
this
will
be
a
little
bit
of
a
hybrid,
because
there'll
be
some
questions
I'll
be
following
up
from
the
pogle
meeting
that
occurred
on
august
20th,
so
I'll
be
doing
a
little
bit
of
a
recap
on
crime
trends
in
response,
but
I
also
hope,
madam
chair,
that
you
and
the
committee
members
are
finding
the
weekly
citywide
crime
data
that
our
analysts
are
providing
you,
I
believe,
every
tuesday
morning.
E
I
hope
that
those
are
beneficial
for
you,
as
you
make
better
informed
decisions
to
your
constituents
that
my
analysts
provide
and
if
there's
any
sort
of
things
that
we
can
do
to
help
tweak
that
to
your
to
your
liking.
Please
feel
free
to.
E
Let
me
know
next
slide,
so
I'll
start
off
just
to
provide
a
again
a
recap
of
each
of
the
precincts
all
of
your
awards,
which
are
encompassed
in
those
kind
of
a
recap
on
the
trends
and
some
of
the
responses
to
the
crime
that
we
have
been
experiencing
in
the
city,
we'll
start
with
the
next
slide.
E
So
for
the
first
precinct
inspector
peterson,
his
teams
are
experiencing
vulnerable
community
members
being
victims
of
crime.
We
have
seen
aggravated
assaults
and
robberies
along
nicklett
mall,
some
of
those
impacting
at
the
public
transportation
stations
around
fifth
and
eighth
in
nicklet,
as
well
as
fifth
to
seventh
and
hennepin.
E
Inspector
peterson
has
been
very
diligent
in
terms
of
how
he's
handling
that
response
next
slide,
with
a
focus
on
our
community
response
teams,
also
coordinated
crime
reduction
details
with
our
hennepin
county
sheriff's
office,
metro
transit
police
department
and
our
other
law
enforcement
partners,
who
have
been
really
great
assets
for
us
and
trying
to
curtail
and
prevent
those
there's
also
been
late,
night
entertainment
details
and
for
our
tech
team.
I
apologize
if
we
could
go
to
the
next
slide.
E
As
well
as
utilizing
the
robust
camera
systems
downtown
as
a
crime,
prevention
and
apprehension
tool-
and
we
will
talk-
I
will
talk
a
lot
about
our
collaborations
with
our
partners
and
particularly
ovp.
E
They
continue
to
play
a
great
resource
for
us
across
the
city,
but
certainly
downtown
as
well
with
such
outreach
as
mad
dads
and
mothers.
Love
next
slide
for
the
second
precinct.
Robbery
of
businesses,
aggravated
assaults
and
berkeley
of
dwellings,
as
well
as
some
motor
vehicle
thefts,
including
mopeds.
E
He
has
directed
his
cpss
to
make
sure
that
they're
providing
informational
notifications
to
neighbors
and
putting
that
information
also
on
the
website
next
door.
Second
precinct
squads
are
also
conducting
alley.
Patrols
and
precinct
personnel
continue
to
attend
those
regular
meetings,
whether
they
be
in
person
or
virtual,
to
distribute
crime
alerts
and
advisories.
E
F
Hi,
thank
you,
president
bender,
and
thank
you
chief.
I
just
I
I'm
really
happy
to
hear
that.
There's
a
robbery
suppression
detail
in
marcy
holmes
and
I'm
wondering
if
you
could
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that.
F
I'm
particularly
interested
in
it
because
a
couple
of
my
constituents
called
me
yesterday
and
told
me
that
they
had
been
told
by
rank
and
file
officers
that
there
was
no
plan
and
that
we
are
not
doing
anything
to
prevent
robberies
in
mercy
homes
that
we
don't
have
the
staff
for
it,
and
so
that
message
obviously
contradicts
the
message
that
you're
delivering
in
the
slideshow.
I'm
happy
to
hear
that
and
I'd
love
to
know
a
little
more
about
what
the
robbery
suppression
work
is
and
what
are
we
doing
to
prevent?
F
What's
been
sort
of
a
pattern
in
mercy
over
the
last
six
weeks,.
E
Madam
chair
to
councilmember
fletcher,
yes,
this,
the
robert
suppression
detail,
as
outlined
by
inspector
loin,
has
taken
place
as
far
as
the
actual
details,
the
times
dates
that
is
ongoing.
I
I
will
actually,
while
we're
meeting
here,
I
will
get
some
more
details
from
inspector
loing
on
that
to
provide
to
you
and
so,
but
he
has
been
aware
of
that
area
and
that
issue
in
marcy
holmes,
and
certainly
he
has
been
doing
details
in
that
area
to
try
to
curtail
those
those
robberies.
E
So
if,
if
madam
chair
would
allow
customer
fletcher
as
we
go
throughout
the
presentation,
I
can
make
sure
that
I
get
some
updates
from
inspector
leung
as
to
some
more
particulars
to
that.
If
that's,
if
that's
all
right.
F
That's
terrific
chief
and
I
I
appreciate
it
and
I
have
spoken
with
inspector
learning
about
it,
and
I
know
that
he's
aware
of
it.
I'm
just
I'm,
I'm
maybe
as
much
noting
that
disconnect
and
just
wanting
to
get
accurate
information
out,
because
there's
some
inaccurate
information
that
seems
to
be
coming
forward
too.
F
The
other
thing
I'll
just
note
is
that
you,
street
racing
is
listed
as
one
of
the
challenges
that
the
second
precinct
is
facing,
and
I
will
note
that
that
is
not
limited
to
the
second
precinct
by
any
means
that
has
been
just
city-wide.
There
has
been
a
significant
increase
in
extremely
dangerous
and
reckless
driving,
and
I
don't
see
anything
on
the
response
list
that
would
be
responsive
to
that,
or
that
seems
to
be
addressing
that
concern.
So
I'm
wondering
if
you
can
describe
what
you're
doing
about
reckless
driving
what
mpd's
plan
is.
E
Madam
chair
to
customer
fletcher
you're,
absolutely
right.
The
street
racing
has
evolved
over
the
last
actually
over
this
past
spring
and
summer.
The
individuals
who've
been
involved
in
that
have
have
certainly
moved
it
from
different
parts
of
our
city,
whereas
it
has
also
appeared,
as
you
mentioned
in
second
precinct.
It
has
also
appeared
more
recently,
as
I
believe
last
week,
in
downtown
minneapolis
and
also
in
uptown
and,
and
so
we
continue
to
monitor.
E
Many
of
the
events
occur
obviously
on
social
media
in
terms
of
notifying
folks.
A
lot
of
it
can
be
spontaneous
as
well,
which
makes
it
very
difficult,
but
our
folks
are
are
certainly
being
made
aware.
Everything
from
we
may
have
to
do
traffic
closures,
street
closures
temporarily
just
to
prevent
that
from
occurring
and
for
those
of
you
who
may
not
be
aware.
E
Not
only
does
the
street
or
racing
create
pedestrian
and
vehicle
major
traffic
safety
issues,
but
it
also
from
our
public
works
folks
creates
major
destruction
to
the
roadways
and
the
street
paving,
and
so
we
are
working
very
diligently
to
make
sure
that
we
do
our
best
to
try
to
have
a
preventive
strategy.
Again.
Some
of
it
is
planned
out
in
advance
and
if
we
get
word
or
information
on
that,
we
try
to
curtail
that.
E
Some
of
it
is
also
very
spontaneous
and
I
believe,
the
events
that
occurred-
councilman
fletcher
in
your
ward
downtown
a
weekend
ago,
kind
of
spawned
off
from
another
event,
and
so
we're
continuing
to
try
to
address
that
even
working
closely
with
our
city
attorney's
office.
If
we
can
identify
those
folks
who
have
been
involved
in
that
in
terms
of
citations
and
other
measures
to
hold
them
accountable,.
B
This
is
not
new,
but
it
is
very
concerning
in
the
current
context.
So
I
think
there
are
a
number
of
possible
explanations
for
this.
I
think
it's
possible.
They
are
essentially
campaigning
either
politically
because
they
don't
support
the
council
member
or
in
some
cases,
the
mayor,
or
perhaps
they
think
that
they're
making
the
case
for
more
resources
for
the
department.
B
I
can
tell
you
in
my
word:
it
is
having
the
opposite
effect.
It
is
making
people
even
more
frustrated
with
the
department
on
the
evening
of
violence
in
uptown
that
gun
violence.
Earlier
that
evening,
an
officer
had
told
my
constituents
that
they
would
not
be
enforcing
property
crime,
and
it's
just
it's.
It's
people
don't
understand.
So
again.
I
can.
I
can
have
my
theory
about
why
I
think
officers
might
be
saying
those
things,
but
I
can
tell
you
that
I
don't
think
it
is
having
the
intended
effect
that
even
they
wish
it
would
be
having.
B
And
so
how
do
we
get
this
under
control
if
you're
telling
us
and
the
inspectors
are
telling
us
that
we
have
a
plan
for
safety,
that
we
are
taking
crime
seriously
and
we
have
officers
on
the
street
telling
people
that
they're
not
enforcing
crime?
What
do
we
do
to
make
sure
that
we
are
having
a
consistent
message
and
that
staff
who
are
employed
by
the
city
are
frankly
are
respectful
for
the
chain
of
command
and
the
direction
that
they're
being
given
by
their
supervisors?
B
Because,
if
not,
if
it's
either
that
they're
following
a
chain
of
command
and
they're
being
told
by
their
supervisors
to
say
these
things
or
they're,
not
following
a
chain
of
command
or
we
need
to
intervene
in
some
way.
That
isn't
happening,
and
you
know
again.
I
know
that
this
is
probably
a
complex
issue,
but
we
need
to
solve
it
because
the
trust
in
our
department
in
our
city
is
deeply
eroded,
and
this
is
not
helping.
E
Madam
chair
to
community
members,
thank
you
for
for
sharing
those
comments
with
me.
Those
those
are
troubling
to
hear
and
I
meet
with
my
command
staff
team
every
monday,
sometimes
more
than
that,
but
certainly
every
monday.
That
is
something
that
will
be
a
priority
that
I
will
relay
back
to
all
and
that's
all
commanders
stall
inspectors,
our
directors
as
well.
E
We
are
going
to
be
responsive,
we've
taken
an
oath
to
do
that,
and
so
that
that
will
be
followed
up
on,
and
I
will
make
sure
that
each
and
every
one
of
our
inspectors,
commanders
down
to
the
precinct,
lieutenants
and
sergeants,
are-
are
making
sure
that
that
message
is
loud
and
clear
that
we
are
not
turning
a
blind
eye
to
crime
or
criminal
behavior
and
that
we
will
be
there
and
continue
to
be
there
for
our
communities.
E
C
E
Also,
just
stress
I'm
sorry,
madam
chair,
I
was
just
going
to
say
too.
We
don't
have
to
obviously
wait
for
a
study
session
if
you're
hearing
that
information,
please,
if
we
I
can
get
that
on
a
timely
manner.
That
would
be
very
helpful
for
me
as
well,
and
I
will
but
after
this
conversation
I
will
be
reaching
out
to
our
command
teams.
B
Thanks
chief
and
I
think
we
can
follow
up
to
and
understand
what
you
know,
how
the
best
way
we
can
help
encourage
our
constituents
to
share
this
information.
I'm
not
sure
everyone
feels
comfortable
having
it
attributed
to
them,
but
I
think
we
need
a
way
to
capture
this
information
as
well.
Thank
you.
E
Madam
chair,
thank
you
very
much
for
third
precinct.
Some
of
the
trends
that
they
inspector
mcginty's
teams
have
been
seeing
is
robberies.
Carjackings,
gun
violence
also.
G
E
Criminal
in
and
of
itself,
we
know
that
we
had
the
we
have
individuals
who
are
experiencing
homelessness
and
that
has
been
spread
throughout
the
the
precinct
more.
E
So
it's
listed
as
some
of
the
impacts
that
have
happened
as
a
result
of
some
of
the
folks
coming
in
to
prey
upon
those
who
are
experiencing
homelessness,
whether
it
be
narcotics,
sex
trafficking
and
other
things,
and
so
one
of
the
things
that
for
the
next
slide,
one
of
the
things
or
some
of
the
things
that
inspector
mcginty
is
addressing
is
also
coordinated.
Crime
suppression
details,
utilizing
the
certain
bird
teams,
community
response
teams
and
the
bicycle
rapid
response
teams.
E
The
previous
federal
task
force,
as
well
as
our
weapons
teams,
have
made
some
significant
arrests
in
terms
of
those
folks
who
were
using
gun
violence
in
the
third
precinct
working
closely
with
our
social
service.
Folks,
our
outreach
teams,
ovp
in
terms
of
the
homeless,
outreach
and
again
partnering
with
such
teams
as
mad
dads
and
mother's
law.
B
Chief,
we
have
a
couple
questions:
council,
member
johnson,
then
council,
member
trader,
unless
councilman
cunningham
did
you
want
to
comment.
B
I
Thank
you,
madam
president,
and
thanks
chief,
I
would
appreciate
some
more
information
on
how
addressing
the
carjackings.
I
know
that
there's
been
a
number
of
them
in
the
community
and
they've
really
terrorized
residents,
and
it
seems
to
me
at
least
that
part
of
the
problem
is
really
in
the
crime
itself,
we're
having
multiple
individuals,
roll
up
in
vehicles
without
plates
or
with
stolen
plates,
so
you
can't
necessarily
trace
it
back
to
where
they
came
from
once
they
carjack
somebody.
It's
like
the
movie
gone
in
60
seconds,
which
is
also
about
auto
theft.
I
How
do
we
stop
it
because
it
seems
like
a
huge
problem
and
it's
something
we
absolutely
want
to
stop
and
also
seems
very
difficult
to
stop,
and
I
don't
know
that
necessarily,
for
instance,
you
know,
adding
more
bodies
is
the
solution
to
that.
It
seems
like
there's
got
to
be
some
other
way
to
try
to
target
and
stop
this
I'd,
love
to
know.
I
What's
being
done,
and
just
your
thought
process
around
deconstructing
that
type
of
crime
and
how
we
actually
hold
these
individuals
accountable,
get
them
off
the
streets,
so
they
aren't
terrorizing
the
community.
E
Madam
chair
to
council,
member
johnson,
so
what
I,
what
I
will
do
is
I'll
I'm
gonna
kind
of
go
a
little
bit
out
of
order.
I
had
planned
to
address
that
specific
question
and
some
others
for
the
the
both
your
word
and
word
eleven,
but
I
guess
I'll,
it's
probably
more
timely
for
me
to
jump
to
that
right
now.
So
so.
E
This
will
this
will
cover,
I
I
believe,
both
councilman
johnson.
Maybe
your
question
right
now,
as
well
as
one
that
will,
I
think,
addressed
councilmember
schrader's
question.
This
is
coming
from
again
the
pogo
meeting
questions
that
we
weren't
able
to
resolve
or
get
to
back
on
august
20th.
But
hopefully
this
will
be
helpful.
There
was
a
meeting
last.
There
was
a
meeting
that
was
held
with
businesses
around
chicago
avenue
in
the
46th
block
area.
Those
businesses
were
being.
E
E
That
group
was
eventually
caught,
charged
and
apprehended
for
those
crimes,
not
only
that
precinct
but
in
other
precincts
more
recently,
businesses,
particularly
in
that
also
in
that
area,
we're
being
hit
by
a
group
of
juvenile
males
robbing
and
carjacking
councilman
johnson
across
the
city.
Arrests
have
been
made,
there's
still
some
pending
charges,
but
both
our
robber
unit
and
juvenile
unit
are
pursuing.
E
Those
third
precinct
also
has
officers,
as
well
as
the
cps
who
are
reaching
out
to
the
businesses
in
that
area,
and
they
have
been
doing
conducting
extra
patrols
through
inspector
mcginty.
Mobile
cameras
are
currently
up
in
place
and
they're
continuing
to
do
outreach.
The
carjackings
councilman
johnson
that
you
mentioned.
We
have
arrested
several
individuals
for
those
more
recently.
E
It
was
a
few
weeks
back
and
I
know
there
was
a
communication
that
went
out
through
our
cps,
but
eventually
they
came
over
to
north
minneapolis
and
we
did
apprehend
several
of
them.
So
we're
continuing
to
work
with
our
city
and
county
attorney's
office
for
those
we're
continuing
to
also
some
of
those
individuals
were
linked
to
st
paul
and
our
investigations.
E
Teams
are
working
closely
with
those
other
agencies
to
make
sure
that
we're
holding
those
folks
accountable,
and
so
we
have
made
some
arrests
in
in
those
areas
specific
to
the
carjackings
that
you
had
mentioned.
Councilmember
johnson.
I
I
appreciate
the
detail
on
it
and
you
know
I
think,
there's
a
perception
out
there
too,
that
even
with
carjackers,
once
these
individuals
are
taken
off
the
street,
that
in
the
judicial
system
they're
let
off
and
just
kind
of
back
out
there
really
quickly
do
you
have
any
context,
you
could
add
around
that
and
kind
of
what
we're
seeing
there
are
we
getting
the
support
we
need
from
the
prosecutorial
and
judicial
side
in
order
for
folks
that
are
committing
violent,
offenses
out
there
and
again
you
know
mass
crime
sprees
that
we're
ensuring
they're,
not
just
right
back
out
there
doing
it
again.
E
Yes,
madam
chair
to
customer
johnson,
so
I
want
to
differentiate
between
stolen
vehicles
and
carjackings
stolen
vehicles
to
your
point,
councilman
johnson.
Those
have
been
more
challenging
to
prosecute
that
it
just
and
it's
something
that
we've
had
continuing
conversations
with
our
county
attorney's
office.
But
the
carjackings
were
someone
and
by
the
way,
so
a
stolen
vehicle.
Typically,
let's
say
person
leaves
their
car
running
or
the
person
just
happens
to
break
into
the
car,
get
it
started
and
take
off
those
have
been
more
difficult
in
terms
or
challenging.
E
I
should
say
in
terms
of
prosecution,
but
the
carjackings,
where
individuals
will
walk
up.
We've
had
reports
recently,
where
you
know
use
mase
on
a
person
or
assaulted
them
at
gunpoint.
Those
types
of
things
we
have
been
successful
in
charging
those
and
so
we'll
continue
to
work
with
our
county
attorneys
on
the
stolen
vehicles,
but
the
carjackings.
We
have
been
charging
those
and
we'll
continue
to
pursue
those.
E
I
also
want
to
say
this
is
specifically
for
ward
11.
and
I've
reached
out
to
director
cotton
in
terms
of
what
sorts
of
ovp
outreaches
I've
been
performing
in
ward
11
and
all
of
the
city-wide
work
of
nextstep
minneapolis
us
outreach
and
gvi
does
also
include
world
11.
E
As
of
right
now,
there's
no
targeted
focus
with
ward
11.
However
minneapolis
us
is
really
new
right
now
to
the
tangled
town
in
northrop
areas
and
we'll
do
they'll
be
doing
some
focused
attention
with
outreach
teams
there.
E
But
director
cotton
will
also
get
more
information
as
to
some
of
the
specifics
where
she
can
kind
of
work
with
mpd
to
addressing
some
of
the
issues
in
ward
11.
B
B
Okay,
I'll
just
flag
that
for
some
follow-up,
I
know
that
there
were
a
lot
of
discussions
last
summer
with
councilmember
fletcher
and
goodman
and
myself
where
we
had
a
similar
dynamic
of
young
teenagers,
and
I
I
do
think
you
know
we
have
multiple
goals
here
of
both
interrupting
these
patterns,
of
certainly
violent
crime
and
property
related
crimes,
but
also
supporting
our
young
people.
B
And
I
I
think
we
could
take
some
time
to
elaborate
either
later
in
this
meeting
or
in
a
future
meeting
of
public
health
and
public
safety
about
about
the
ways
that
our
system
is
currently
working
related
to
juvenile
juveniles
in
our
system
versus
you
know
some
work.
I
think
that
I
know
that
is
underway
through
the
criminal
justice
coordinating
committee
and
partnerships
with
the
city,
attorney's
office
and
mpd,
and
the
county
to
really
match
the
right
response
to
reach
those
two
goals
of
interrupting
the
cycles,
but
also
supporting
our
young
people.
A
Thank
you,
council,
president,
and
and
thank
you
chief.
I
think
this
is
definitely
a
step
in
the
right
direction
to
get
this
type
of
information
not
just
of
crime
rates,
but
also
what
the
response
is
by
mpd.
I
really
you
know.
I've
said
for
the
last
almost
two
months
now
that
that's
really
what's
been
lacking
and
to
kind
of
to
get
to
that
point,
I
think
it's
what's
also
difficult
about
this
presentation.
A
Is
it
directly
contradicts
what
I'm
hearing
and
also
the
experience
of
residence
and
just
to
give
you
to
start
off
on
one
example,
the
crts,
like
I
mean
it's
something
you
know
I
brought
up
that
I
was
I
heard
from
the
inspector
that
he
said
he
had
no
crt
at
all,
which
contradicted
an
earlier
presentation.
You
did.
I
asked
you
again,
you
got
back
to
me.
You
checked
in
with
the
inspector
really
appreciate
that,
and
here
we
are
saying
that
the
third
precinct
is
utilizing
crt.
A
E
Madam
chair
to
consumer
trader,
thank
you
for
noting
that
I
apologize.
I
was
working
off
the
pogo
slides
from
the
august
20th
session.
You're
correct
crt
has
been
dissolved,
so
I
I
apologize
for
that.
I
was
working
off
that
slide,
so
I
was
just
going
through
it
and
for
the
for
the
record
just
to
correct
that
crt
has
been
resolved
from
the
third
precinct,
so
I
apologize
for
that
confusion.
There.
A
Not
I
mean
not
a
problem
and
also
a
problem.
I
mean
I
mean
that's
good,
to
have
the
right
information,
but
I
think
this
really
comes
down
to
needing
to
know
the
right
information.
You
know
you've
heard
from
multiple
council
members
that
leadership
and
is
saying
one
thing
and
rank
and
file
is
saying
something
else,
and
all
people
want
to
know
is
is
what
the
problem
is.
You
know
we
we
don't.
We
don't
need
a
report
to
know
that
crime
is
up.
A
We
don't
need
to
know
how
the
just
the
brazenness
of
crime
in
the
11th
ward
has
just
gone
up,
and
people
are
really
feeling
that
what
people
want
to
know
is
mpd's
response.
They
want
to
know
what
you're
doing
with
your
185
million
dollar
budget.
So
it's
helpful
to
hear
about
you
know
the
coordinated
crime
suppression.
A
It's
it's
it'd,
be
helpful
to
know
since
you're
not
having
a
crt
what
you
are
doing,
because
these
are
continued
issues
like
you
brought
up
the
the
crime
at
48th
and
chicago,
which
continues
to
be
a
problem,
and
I
brought
those
questions
to
you
as
well,
because
people
want
to
know
why.
Why
is
this
uptick
happening
and
what
you're
doing
about
it
and
people
have
called
for
a
coordinated
crime,
suppression
and
called
for
increased
patrols?
A
If
that's
happening
you,
let
people
know
about
that,
because
right
now,
they're
not
seeing
that
people
are
very
frustrated
and
that's
because
they're
they're
living
in
fear.
So
if,
if
you're
working
to
make
sure
people
are
safe
and
you're
doing
things,
they
need
to
know
about
that.
So
I
I
I'm
raising
that
as
a
point,
but
I
do
need
to
hear
how
that's
going
to
be
changed
in
the
future,
because
we
continue
to
get
issues.
We
get
continuing
reports
on
what
prime
is
happening
and
we
do
not
get.
A
What
is
what
is
being
done
about
that?
I
have
seen
some
once
in
a
while
when
there's
been
an
arrest
that
information
coming
out
but
you're
not
really
making
a
an
effort,
it
seems
like
to
share
these
have
been
the
problems,
and
these
are
what
we've
responded
to
and
so
that
that
is
what
I
think
is
going
to
going
to
be
helpful,
because
I
think
council
president
put
it
really
well
it's
having
the
opposite
effect.
E
Madam
chair
customer
persuader,
thank
you
so
much
for
for
bringing
that
to
light,
and
one
of
the
things
I
was
just
noting
is
that
working
with
our
inspectors
to
make
sure
that
and
we'll
all
tease
through
this
at
some
point
but
to
see
how
we
can,
through
communication
and
messaging,
get
out
some
sort
of
whether
it's
weekly
or
bi-weekly
responses,
because
I
think
that's
what
I'm
hearing
you
say
is
that
folks
certainly
know
the
what's
occurring.
A
I
I
appreciate
that
chief
and
thank
you,
and
I
also
just
want
to
reflect
that.
That's
that's
that's
the
start.
I
think
what
is
really
people
are
looking
for
is
a
change
in
the
conversation
like
right
now,
when
folks
are
asking
why?
Why
is
the
response
time
it'll
take
so
long?
Why
can't
you
work
on
this
investigation?
A
The
only
response
we're
getting
is
well,
we
we
don't
have
capacity
and
folks
want
to
know
how
to
solve
the
problem.
They
want
to
know
what
the
problem
is
and
we've
had
the
problem
of
the
like
juveniles.
Targeting
you
know
the
48th
in
chicago
business
district.
A
If
the
problem
is
the
county
problem,
is
the
laws
people
want
to
know
that,
like
they,
the
only
answer
being
we
need
more
cops
is
frankly
not
not
settling
with
people
when
they
see
eight
officers
respond
to
a
homeless,
individual
and
nothing
happened
on
an
investigation.
So
it
really
needs
to
be
a
little
bit
deeper
of
why?
Why
you're
doing
the
strategy
you
are
so
it
really
kind
of
comes
back
to
a
bigger
question.
I
ask
like
what
is
your
vision
and
what
is
your
strategy?
A
If
you
are,
you
know
in
charge
of
mpd
and
have
a
set
amount
of
budget
with
a
set
amount
of
officers?
How
are
you
going
to
keep
people
safe?
Just
saying
you
can't
handle,
unless
you
have
more
money,
is
not
not
an
option
any
of
us
have
under
covet,
and
so
we
we
really
need
more.
It's
helpful
to
know
what
those
choices
are,
but
at
this
point
like
those
are
the
realities,
and
we
need
to
hear
how
you
are
going
to
do
the
best
you
can
with
what
you
have.
E
Madam
chair
customer
service,
thank
you
so
much.
I
actually
to
your
question.
I
actually
have
that
further
on
in
the
presentation,
but
I
will
absolutely
get
to
that
and
and
try
to
address
that
and
for
the
record,
if
I've
ever
said
to
this
body,
that
the
only
way
that
I,
as
chief,
can
help
solve
the
problems
in
this
city
is
by
more
bodies.
E
I
I
don't
believe
I've
ever
said
that,
but
I
want
to
let
the
folks
know
that
I
don't
believe
that
I
believe
that
community
safety
involves
everyone
and-
and
it
involves
several
different
layers
of
approaches
and
it
evolves.
E
And
so
so
if
I
did
say
that,
please
forgive
me
that
it
was
not
what
I've
ever
would
have
intended
to
say,
and
so
I
don't
believe
that
you
can
ever
arrest
your
way
out
of
situations
and
problems,
and
so
I've
been
doing
this
work
long
enough
to
know
that,
and
I
think
it's
gonna
create
everyone,
leaning
in
everyone
being
courageous
enough
to
sometimes
walk
away
from
their
long-held
beliefs
and
and
look
at
how
we
can
be
very
innovative
and
problem-solving
in
this
effort.
So
I
truly
appreciate
your
question.
There.
A
I
want
to
make
sure
my
other
colleagues
have
a
chance
to
talk.
I
do
want
to
talk
on
that.
One
point,
though.
Chief
you've
never
said
we're
going
to
rest
our
way
out,
and
I
appreciate
you
saying
that
now,
but
it
is
something
when
you
say
we
need
400
more
officers.
A
The
implication
is
that
is
what's
needed
for
the
problem,
and
it
is
something
that
there's
a
lot
more
to
it.
When
and
you
hear
that
from
constituents
when
they
say
why,
don't
you
have
a
coordinated
crime,
suppression
tactic,
it's
people
want
to
know
the
tactics
and
what
you're
doing,
because,
right
now
I
have
constituents
that
are
they're
doing
their
own
crime
investigations
to
figure
things
out
and
they're
if
they
aren't
hearing
the
depth
of
your
training,
the
depth
of
your
experience,
they're
wondering
what
they
are
paying
for
to
just
put
it
really
bluntly.
E
Madam
mature
customer
trader,
I
appreciate
the
conversation.
I
appreciate
your
comments
on
that.
D
Thank
you,
madam
president,
and
thank
you
chief
aaron
dondo.
I
I
really
want
to
make
sure
we're
continuing
to
focus
attention
at
38th
and
chicago.
This
quote:
unquote,
george
floyd
square
or
some
people
are
calling
it
an
autonomous
zone,
but
the
the
level
of
gun,
violence,
drug
dealing,
intimidation,
extortion,
people
are
having
to
to
to
pay
to
get
out
of
their
alleys.
D
C
D
E
Madam
chair
council,
vice
president
jenkins
yeah.
Thank
you.
First
of
all,
thank
you.
I
know
that
you
as
well
as
councilmember
cano,
have
been
working
so
hard
on
the
the
situation
up
there
at
30th
in
chicago
from
day
one,
and
I
know
that.
E
Obviously
you
have
been
on
the
ground
talking
with
some
of
the
the
key
folks
up
there
and
some
of
the
stakeholders
and
everything
from
the
community
safety
aspects
to
the
public
health
aspects,
and
I
certainly
have
been
made
aware
by
some
of
our
neighbors
up
there,
some
of
the
problems
that
they're
experiencing
all
of
this,
while
you're
working
hard
to
come
to
a
a
resolution
on
how
to
get
a
phased
reopening
as
well
for
the
the
streets
up
there.
E
I
know
inspector
mcginty
has
been
meeting
with
the
neighbors
up
there.
His
teams
continue
to
respond
in
there.
I
think
it's
lessened
in
terms
of
of
you
know
them
getting
in
there
and
helping.
But
I,
when
I
say
lesson
that
doesn't
mean
that
the
crime
has
lessened,
but
that
they
are
responding,
but
the
gunshots
that
are
going
off
in
there.
I
do
believe.
E
I
do
believe
that,
with
the
the
current
traffic
environment
situation
up
there,
there
are
some
individuals
up
there
that
quite
frankly,
have
become
more
emboldened
and
the
longer
that
situation
kind
of
stays
as
it
is
right
now.
That
is
something
that's
going
to
be
problematic,
but
we
must
continue
to
respond
to
go
in
there
to
work
to
to
help
those
neighbors
up
there
so
that
they
don't
feel
like
they're
abandoned
or
they
don't
feel
like
they're
held
hostage
up
there.
E
We
got
to
continue
to
make
arrests
up
there
and
so
we're
gonna
we're
gonna,
keep
trying
our
best
to
to
provide
some
sense
of
community
safety
normalcy.
If
that's,
if
that's
a
word,
I
can
use
but
yeah,
there's,
there's,
there's
a
there's,
a
lot
of
complexities,
I'm
preaching
to
the
choir,
as
you
know
up
there,
but
the
number
one
thing
that
we
have
to
do
is
when
that
person
fixes
the
phone
to
call
911
we
have
to
get
in
there.
E
We
have
to
respond
promptly
and
help
them,
and
so
we'll
continue
to
work
with
it
and
again.
I
know
that
you've
been
invested
so
much
of
your
time
and
energy
to
try
to
to
help
that
situation
we'll.
I
will
promise
to
that.
We'll
do
our
best
in
terms
of
the
the
community
safety
piece,
the
public
safety
piece
to
to
address
and
respond
over
there
appropriately.
D
Yeah,
no,
it
is
very
true.
There
are
a
lot
of
complexities
in
this
situation.
You
know
national
and
international
concerns
etc,
but
I
I'm
just
pleading
that
we
continue
to
provide
service
that
we
continue
to
to
to
be
engaged
and
and
monitoring
and
hopefully
investigating
these
issues
these
crimes.
D
D
You
know
carrying
automatic
machine
guns
like-
and
I
know,
there's
no
permits
for
these
things,
because
it's
just
really
deeply
disturbing
frightening,
and
not
only
are
they
walking
around
carrying
them,
they
are
using
them.
D
People
are
being
attacked
while
riding
their
bikes
and
the
crime
is
actually
spreading
out
from
you
know,
I
think
maybe
agape
is
having
some
impact,
but
now
that
is
spreading
out
throughout
you
know
the
south
side
42nd
street
46th
street
48th
street.
D
As
you
noted
earlier,
I
I
have
to
believe
that
some
of
that
is
coming
from
38th
in
chicago,
so
the
situation
and-
and
I
understand
that
this
is
all
throughout
the
city,
but
you
know,
as
many
of
my
colleagues
have
noted
earlier,
we
we
need
to
really
fully
understand
what
is
being
done
to
address
these
issues
so.
C
E
Council
vice
president,
thank
you
for
that
and
we'll
continue
and
I'll
continue
to
help
support
inspector
mcgant
and
his
teams
to
make
sure
that
we
are
doing
all
we
can
under
those
complex
situations
over
there
in
your
ward,
to
make
sure
that
we're
there
for
the
community
that
that
calls
us
and
needs
help.
J
Thank
you,
madam
chair,
thank
you,
chief,
being
a
new
council
member
and
just
joining
the
council
member.
I
have
been
getting
so
many
calls,
and
so
many
emails,
and
also
folks
coming
to
my
office
and
really
addressing
the
crimes
that
are
taking
place
in
ward
6.,
not
sure
if
you
are
keeping
the
the
data
of
how
many
robberies
and
carjacking
in
like
word
by
word,
but
presidents
over
here
in
ward,
six
are
very
afraid
of
their
lives.
J
There
are
stories
of
daylight,
daylight,
carjacking
and
robberies,
and
just
some
youth
or
some
young
man
just
smiling
around
and
really
carjacking
on
coffee
shops
and
people
going
grocery
stores
and
so
on
and
presidents
are
asking.
Where
are
the
police,
because
that
is
the
only
public
safety
option
they
have
at
the
moment
mbd.
They
rely
on
the
nvd
and
they're
saying
they're.
They
are
nowhere
to
be
seen
response
time
is
very
slow
and
once
they
come
there,
there's
absolutely
no
solution.
J
They're
telling
people
to
well
call
us
when
you
find
the
car,
or
you
know,
and
I
was
reached
out
by
business
owners
too-
that
are
have
closed
their
business,
not
because
of
kovit
is
because
they
are
afraid
to
open
the
door
and
around
chicago
and
franklin
area.
J
J
So
it's
my
questions
that
has
not
been
answered
in
were
six
crimes,
so
is
there
a
plan
that
you
have
where
the
kai's
crimes
are
taking
place
where
the
highest
crime
of
carjacking
and
and
and
robberies
are
taking
place?
Would
you
put
more
resource
in
there
and
I'm
not
sure
if,
if
you
have
the
data
numbers
but
the
carjacking,
it's
everyday
thing
in
here
in
ward
6.?
Thank
you.
E
Madam
chair
customer
osmond
and
welcome
to
our
to
the
city
council,
and
I
look
forward
to
working
with
you
and
your
team
moving
forward,
so
we
we
we
do
approach
all
of
these.
We
do
have
a
centralized
robbery
team,
but
they
do
work
closely
with
the
different
precincts
to
try
to
identify,
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
some
of
the
suspects,
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
some
of
these
particularly
carjackings,
they
travel
across
city.
There
was
one
that
recently
occurred.
E
I
believe
customer
osmond
in
your
ward
that
started
at
the
seward
co-op.
Eventually
those
juveniles
crashed
the
car
over
by
seven
corners
and
were
apprehended
and
and
so
we're
continuing
to
focus
on
on
that
it
is
a
city-wide
problem,
but
we're
we're
continuing
to
work
with
our
intelligence,
folks,
we're
continuing
to
work
with
our
our
votef
folks
from
the
hennepin
county,
sheriff's
office
and
and
work
with
our
combined
partners
to
make
sure
that
we
can
do
something
to
to
really
try
to
prevent
this
here.
E
As
president
madam
chair
bender
mentioned,
you
know
we
want
to
hold
folks
accountable,
particularly
these
juveniles,
but
at
the
same
time,
everything
that
we
can
do
to
not
really
flood
the
system
with
juveniles.
If
there's
preventative
things
that
we
can
do
to
prevent
that,
we
want
to
also
do
those
two
tier
tracks
as
well,
but
I'd
be
more
than
happy
to
make
sure
that
the
precinct
inspector
and
we
can
get
some
more
responses
to
you-
is
what
we're
specifically
doing
in
ward
6.
B
Thanks
chief
and
councilman
cunningham
is
in
queue
after
this
question.
I
think
we'll
pause
and
let
the
chief
continue
with
the
presentation
and
then
maybe
hold
the
rest
of
the
questions
until
the
end.
Just
so,
we
make
sure
we
get
through
this
portion
and
on
to
the
more
data
focused
I.t,
slides
as
well,
and
these
questions
are
really
important.
B
I
will
note,
I
do
think
a
theme
that
may
not
be
so
obvious,
but
I
can
see
a
pattern
here,
which
is
that
I
think
what
we're
hearing
from
mpd
staff,
in
our
words
in
the
precincts,
is
a
little
different
than
what
we're
hearing
in
this
presentation.
So
I
think
the
questions
the
council
members
are
asking
may
seem
redundant,
but
I
they're
responding
to
what
they're
hearing
you
know,
I
think,
on
the
ground
and
what
their
constituents
are
hearing
from
mpd.
B
H
Thank
you,
madam
president,
so
there
there
are
two
things
that
I
just
want
to
mention
or
that
I
would
like
to
speak
to
so
the
first
is
around
the
carjackings.
We
do
know
that
it's
overwhelmingly
young
people
who
are
doing
this.
This
was
a
conversation
that
was
brought
up
by
council
members,
fletcher
and
goodman
last
year
and
the
conversation
a
little
bit
petered
out.
We
didn't
really
come
to
a
resolution
as
a
result
of
this
issue
being
raised
to
the
conversation.
H
So
it
is
my
intention
and
and
so
it
what,
where
we're
seeing
the
disconnect
is
with
the
juvenile
supervision
center.
And
how
are
we
so?
H
It's
like
we
could
be
arresting
young
people,
but
then
they're
going
to
the
jsc
and
then
they're
being
released
and
like
what
are
the
other
options
besides
that,
because
there
are
young
people
who
are
gaming,
the
system
like
knowing
that
they're
going
to
be
immediately
released,
and
so
it
is
my
intention
to
bring
this
conversation
to
the
public
health
and
safety
committee
so
that
we
can
dig
further
into
it.
So
for
my
colleagues
I
I
will
be
sure
to
let
you
all
know
when
that
conversation
is
going
to
be
happening.
H
I
have
meeting
with
director
cotton
today
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
the
details,
like
is
it
that
we
need
policy
change
like
what?
Where
are
the
gaps
and
where
are
the
missing
practices?
I
know
some
folks
personally
who
have
experienced
carjackings
and
it's
a
very
traumatic
experience.
H
H
So
so
all
that
to
say
we
are
looking
at
hold
as
holding
that
conversation
in
the
public
health
and
safety
committee,
because
it's
definitely
something
that
needs
to
be
done
deeper
into,
and
then
the
last
thing
I
just
want
to
say
right
quickly
is
with
all
due
respect.
Madam
president,
there's
a
lot
of
council
members
and
the
third
precinct
there's
only
two
for
the
fourth
precinct
and
we
have
a
concentration
of
the
challenges.
H
So
I
would
like
to
be
able
to
ask
questions
during
that
part
of
the
presentation,
so
I
I
would
really
like
to
not
have
to
wait
until
the
end
of
the
presentation
to
be
able
to
dig
into
the
fourth
precinct
data.
Thank
you.
B
Sure
yep
and
it's
possible
that
we
will
not
finish
the
extent
of
the
presentations.
B
I
know
there's
a
piece
at
the
end
that
customers
had
asked
for
related
to
reform
of
the
department
and
vision
for
the
future,
and
so
I
was
hopeful
that
we
could
get
to
that
part
of
this
presentation
today.
So
I
think,
with
that
in
mind,
let's
proceed
to
through
the
precincts.
E
Madam
chair
council
committee
members,
so
the
fourth
precinct
what
inspector
pulphus's
teams
have
been
experiencing
the
community's
been
experiencing
is
group
violence,
prevalence
of
gun,
violence,
narcotics
and
drug
cells,
prostitution
or
sex
trafficking,
and
an
increase
in
reckless
and
erratic
vehicle
patterns.
Excellent.
E
Some
of
the
response
that
inspector
polface
has
been
utilizing
is
our
gang
intervic
gang
interdiction
team
details,
our
community
response
team
details
working
closely
with
our
gvi
partners.
They
had
worked
with
the
federal
task
force.
The
united
states
attorney
general
had
opened
up
as
well.
Excuse
me
continuing
the
wonderful
partnership
with
office
of
violence,
prevention
with
mad
dad's
mother's
love
and
others,
and
I
I
think
madam
chair
there's,
I'm
sorry.
I'm
making
an
assumption
here.
Councilmember
cunningham
may
have
some
questions.
H
Yes,
thank
you.
So
I
too,
in
the
fourth
precinct,
I'm
having
a
lot
of
constituents
come
back
and
say
that
that
officers
are
essentially
telling
them
unless
they
had
more
people.
They're
not
gonna,
be
able
to
do
their
jobs,
and
that
is
essentially
again
making
people
ask
like.
Well,
then,
what
are
we
paying
for
now?
So
I
just
wanted
to
share
that
similar
issue.
Last
night
I
had
yet
another
17
girls
murdered.
H
In
my
ward,
I
would
say
that
I
don't
have
an
exact
number,
but
it's
been
at
least
five
17
year
olds
have
been
murdered.
In
my
ward,
the
week,
37
numbers
of
violent
crimes,
half
of
the
shootings
have
taken
place
in
ward,
4
and
all,
but
two
of
them
have
taken
place
in
north
minneapolis.
H
I
have
two
people
in
my
ward,
who
were
sitting
in
their
homes
and
bullets
that
were
not
meant
for
them,
went
into
their
homes
and
hit
them
like.
That
is
an
awful
scenario
to
be
sitting
at
home,
watching
tv
and
a
bullet
flies
into
your
home
and
and
hits
you
when
you
have
nothing
to
do
with
what's
happening
outside
my
constituents
are
looking
at
me
saying
what
is
the
city
doing
like
mpd
is
not
showing
up
when
they
get
here.
H
They
say,
oh
well,
you
know
we're
just
running
from
from
call
to
call,
so
we
can't
really
do
anything
like,
and
this
is
like
the
experience
that
north
siders
are
having
right
now
is
like
there
is
a
collective
community
trauma
that
is
happening
because
of
the
fact
that
the
gunfire
does
not
stop,
and
so
I'm
curious.
H
Where
are
we
at
with
the
federal
task
force?
You
know
it's
like
we
brought
them
in
and
we
have
not
seen
any
change
like.
I
still
have
a
17
year
old,
murdered
again
last
night
in
my
ward,
I'm
not
seeing
the
results
of
the
get
team
and
the
cert
teams
like
we're,
not
seeing
that
and
so
like.
Where
are
the
gaps
so
that
we're?
H
Actually,
you
know
we're
bringing
forward
the
cure
violence
model
to
be
able
to
like
get
help,
infuse
that
but
like
I
can't
keep
having
children
murdered
in
my
ward
people
sitting
in
their
homes
being
hit
by
bullets.
I
know
that
it's
not
only
the
police
department,
but
that
is
who
people
are
looking
to
right
now
and
again,
much
the
same
as
my
colleagues.
H
What
you're
saying
here
is
not
what
officers
are
telling
people
when
they're
showing
up
they're,
essentially
saying
that
that
there's
nothing
that
they
can
do
because,
like
there's,
not
enough
resources
or
you
know
like
it's,
it
essentially
like
I've,
had
lots
of
people
who
have
said
even
leadership
is
saying:
if
only
we
have
more
officers,
then
these
problems
would
not
be
happening,
so
they're
lobbying
for
more
resources
when
that
is
hard
to
come
by
right
now,
in
the
time
that
we're
in
so
first,
I
just
have
to
say
that,
like
this
is
unacceptable,
what's
happening
in
my
community,
I
am
tired
of
17
year
old
children
being
murdered.
H
What
is
the
plan
from
mpd's
perspective
and-
and
I
will
also
say
that
there's
also
nothing
here
around
the
erratic
driving.
I
had
a
15
year
old
last
night,
who
was
on
a
skateboard
and
was
injured
last,
I
heard
they
didn't
think
she
was
gonna
make
it.
I
have
not
gotten
an
update
about
it.
I
had
like
three
acts
of
severe
accidents
in
my
ward,
so
there's
nothing
here
about
that
either.
H
So,
as
you
can
see
like,
I
am,
I
am
at
my
wit's
end
with
how
bad
it's
been
without
feeling
like
we're.
Getting
any
real
support
from
the
community
feels
that
they're
not
getting
any
real
support.
So
with
all
of
that,
what
is
the
plan?
Where
are
things
at,
and
how
do
we
get
the
the
information
down
to
the
rank
and
file
so
that
they're
giving
correct
information
to
constituents
when
they're
showing
up.
E
Madam
chair
councilmember
cunningham.
Thank
you
for
your
your
comments
here
related
to
that.
I,
like
you,
it
is
devastating
when
we
lose
any
loss
of
life
to
lose
a
17
year
old
is
unconscionable.
It
should
not
ever
be
occurring
in
our
communities,
but
it
has-
and
I
know
that
the
the
community
members
of
the
north
side
in
the
fourth
precinct
have
experienced
a
overwhelmingly
disproportionate
number
of
gun
violence
related
events.
E
So
one
let
me
parse
out
again
the
communication
piece
that
has
been
very
consistent
with
our
committee
members,
our
council
members
regarding
what
is
the
communication
that
rank
and
file
officers
are
conveying
back
to
your
constituents.
That
is
something
that
I
again
will,
after
our
discussion
here,
go
back
and
have
those
conversations
with
our
our
leadership
teams
to
make
sure
that
the
proper
right
message
is
being
delivered.
So
what
are
we
doing
about
the
gun
violence
in
north
minneapolis?
I
will.
E
I
will
tell
you
that
it
is
an
all
hands
on
deck
approach.
We
are
experiencing
gun
violence
in
the
city
that
we
have
not
seen.
In
five
years
our
homicide
rates
have
surpassed.
Last
year's
are
doubled.
Last
year's
were
sadly
approaching
almost
near
400
people
who
have
been
shot
and
wounded
by
gun
violence,
which
you
mentioned.
The
word
trauma
that
is
a
compounding
trauma
to
our
communities
as
well,
we're
doing
everything
from
our
git
teams.
E
I
was
just
looking
at
information
specifically
to
north
minneapolis
and
our
gun,
violence
response
teams.
Excuse
me
our
gun,
violence
response
unit
and
what
they've
done
their
activity
out
of
all
the
five
precincts
to
date.
This
year,
they've
focused
at
least
253
times
their
activities
in
the
fourth
precinct.
The
second
closest
is
the
third
precinct
at
57.
E
they're,
doing
they've
done
over
147
unit
details
over
91.
Procedurally,
just
street
checks
search
warrants.
We're
working
with
our
vote
teams
we
are,
we
cannot.
The
life
is
too
valuable.
We
cannot
continue
to
lose
life
in
our
streets,
whether
that's
on
broadway
avenue
or
lake
street,
and
so,
while
the
united
states
attorney's
task
force
has
been
deactivated.
E
The
work
has
not
stopped.
We
are
still
utilizing
them
in
terms
of
the
intelligence
asset
they
bring
to
us.
We
are
still
utilizing
them
for
the
prosecution
and
they
are
still
charging
folks
up
federally
for
those
crimes.
Our
folks
are
out
there
they're
still
getting
the
guns,
and
so
we
have
to
continue
to
do
that.
We've
experienced
and
sadly
this
has
just
been
five
years-
a
five-year
increase
that
we
have
not
seen
before.
We
have
far
too
many
guns
on
our
streets,
councilman
cunningham.
E
We
are
going
to
surpass
the
number
of
guns
we've
recovered,
we're
still
arresting
folks,
we're
possession
of
guns
who
should
not
be
and
those
who
are
bringing
guns
into
our
community
and
selling
them.
We've
made
rest
down
the
38th
in
chicago
area
about
a
month
or
so
back,
so
we're
still
going
after
those
folks
who
are
committing
the
gun
violence,
but
you
know
better
than
anybody.
It
won't
just
be
the
police.
E
We
have
to
layer
it
back
to
what
is
making
a
young
person
pick
up
a
gun,
carry
it
in
their
waistband
and
want
to
exact
revenge
or
retaliation
or
retribution
against
another
young
person.
You
know
we
we
are
not
going
to
always
be
that
the
most
appropriate
response.
To
that.
That's
why
I
value
the
work
that
director,
cotton
and
her
teams
have
been
doing
as
much
as
we
can
try
to
do
to
prevent
that,
but
we
will
continue
to
utilize.
E
Do
we
have
all
of
the
resources
right
now
that
I
would
like
to
see?
Absolutely
not.
However,
we
just
have
to
change
the
way
that
we're
doing
things
we
have
to
leverage
our
partners
we're
working
with
our
hennepin
county
sheriff's
office,
violent
offender
task
force,
team,
we're
working
with
the
metro,
transit
chief,
resells
teams.
We've
had
other
agencies
that
have
come
in
and
conducting
details
for
us
across
the
city
from
broadway
avenue
to
nicklett
mall,
and
we're
going
to
continue
to
do
that.
I
agree
with
you.
E
I
think,
having
this
conversation
about
the
juvenile
justice
juvenile
center
supervision
center.
I
think
that's
going
to
be
important
as
well,
but
we're
not
going
to
stop
I'm
not
going
to
stop.
We.
E
We
have
to
keep
our
city
safe
and
we
have
to
do
everything
we
can
to
save
lives
and,
as
we
go
into
further
study
sessions
or
the
as
you
chair,
the
monthly
public
safety
and
health
meetings,
we'll
we'll
come
with
more
responses
to
what
we're
going
to
do
to
try
to
keep
our
city
safe
and
work
on
that
community
safety
piece.
B
Okay
chief,
thank
you.
That's
all
the
questions
we
have
from
council
members
for
now,
so
we
can
proceed.
E
Thank
you,
so
very
much
sorry
about
that.
The
fifth
precinct
had
been
has
been
experiencing
robberies,
burglaries,
criminal
activity
involving
youth
in
nighttime,
gun,
violence,
assaults
and,
as
a
customer
fletcher
had
mentioned,
it's
a
city-wide
issue
but
drag
racing.
E
Some
of
the
response
that
inspector
huffman
has
been
employing
are
detailed
patrols
working
with
the
uptown
association
of
nightlife
business
owners,
combined
details
with
other
precincts
and
specialty
units
again
leveraging
the
resource
and
partnership
with
the
office
of
violence
prevention,
including
mad
dads
and
mothers,
love.
E
So,
madam
chair,
at
this
time,
I'm
going
to
just
try
to
touch
on
some
more
of
the
questions
that
committee
members
had
proposed
during
the
august
20th
session.
E
So
one
of
the
one
of
the
questions
that
came
up
were
what
are:
what
are
some
of
the
the
different
agencies
that
minneapolis
is
involved
with
the
mpd's
involved
within
coordinating
response
to
crimes
we
are
seeing
and
we
continue
to
work
collaboratively.
Some
of
those
agencies
involve
county
sheriff's
office,
metro,
transit,
police
department,
university
of
minnesota
police,
we're
working
with
our
atf
fbi
and
other
federal
task
force
partners.
E
Another
question
that
came
up
from
committee
members:
is
it
true
that
the
violent
criminal
apprehension
team
had
been
dissolved?
That
is
correct.
That
is
true,
and
what
are
we
doing
in
order
to
still
go
after
and
hold
those
folks
accountable
who
have
committed
violent
crimes?
E
So
we
are
utilizing
our
gun,
violence,
response
team
under
the
direction
of
commander
case,
and
they
are
continuing
to
work
along
with
doing
our
probable
cause,
pickups
and
warrants,
and
even
utilizing
folks,
such
as
hindi,
county,
violent
offender
task
force
to
help
us
in
in
bringing
those
folks
into
custody
who
have
been
committing
violent
crimes
in
our
city.
E
E
That
obviously
is
under
the
direction
of
director
cotton,
and
we
have
had
a
good
relationship,
a
wonderful
relationship
actually
working
with
her
and
her
teams,
whether
it's
through
gvi,
some
of
the
outreach
that
she
has
utilized
community
messengers
for
whether
it's
helping
address
some
of
the
addiction
issues
in
our
communities.
E
Some
of
the
outreach
for
those
experiencing
homelessness
and
working
with
some
of
our
youth
and
we'll
continue
to
expound
upon
that
there
is
the
cure
violence
model
that
ovp
has
activated
and
we
have
violence
interrupters
that
will
be
activated
throughout
our
city,
and
so
we
just
had
a
wonderful
virtual
presentation
that
she
hosted
with
some
of
those
leaders
from
that
just
a
week
ago
with
our
leadership
team
and
so
we're
looking
forward
to
to
working
collaboratively
with
ovp.
On
that.
E
E
This
is
this
is
challenging
because
of
the
the
complexities
legally.
There
have
been
some
legal
opinions
that
when
we
do
that
it
can
be
viewed
as
entrapment
there's
also
this
prosecutorial
perspective.
The
death
cases
require
proof
that
the
individual
intended
to
deprive
the
owner
of
possession
and
leaving
something
sitting
unattended
can
be
perceived
as
abandoned
property.
So
there's
some
there's
some
legal
complexities
to
that.
E
E
What
I
can
report
is
that
we
average
on
average,
we
average
about
40
to
45
normal
typical
separations
a
year
through
retirement.
That
number
is
up
close
to
about
100.
Now
we
have
seen
an
increase
in
other
types
of
leaves
or
other
types
of
claims,
and-
and
so
this
is
obviously
mid-september.
We
obviously
could
see
more
of
that
as
we're
already
past
what
we
normally
see
but
those
actual
separations.
E
They
don't
all
just
come
in
on
my
desk
at
one
day,
so
it
can
fluctuate
through
the
year.
So
so
it's
it's
very
difficult
to
get
a
hardened
number
to
project
what
that
may
ultimately
be,
but
right
now
the
latest
numbers
we
have
would
be
approximately
about
100..
That
being
said
on,
the
other
leaves
that
are
that
could
be
disability
or
other
leaves.
Those
employees
are
still
accounted
for,
so
to
speak
on
our
books.
E
So
it's
it's
not
necessarily
that
they're
removed
as
far
as
personnel
or
full-time
employees
from
our
books.
So
we're
still,
we
still
account
for
those,
but
to
date
those
numbers,
including
normal
separation
and
other
leaves
we're
sitting
at
right
about
100
mid-september.
I
Thank
you,
madam
president,
chief.
I
want
to
go
back
to
the
bait
items
question
for
just
a
minute.
I
appreciate
the
the
context
around
how
prosecutors
are
looking
at
this.
I
At
the
same
time,
it
seems
to
me
that
again
kind
of
thinking
through
and
deconstructing,
these
property
crimes
which
are
affecting
a
lot
of
residents,
we'll
have
individuals
going
down
alleys,
all
day,
long
and
they're,
pulling
stuff
from
people's
yards
and
from
their
property
and
obviously
those
things
are
not
abandoned
and
it's
very
difficult
to
catch
them,
because,
usually
you
don't
catch
them
in
the
act
right
and
if
they
notice
that
they've
been
spotted,
they
can
get
away
very
quickly.
They
know
lots
of
excuses
that
they
tell
officers.
I
We
heard
of
one
case
from
the
third
precinct
inspector
who
said
that
a
couple
of
repeat
burglars
were
in
a
a
woman's
house
who
had
left
the
door
unlocked.
They
went
inside,
they
stacked
everything
up
by
the
doors
they
got
busted
and
just
said:
hey.
I
We
had
to
use
the
bathroom,
so
we
entered
the
house
and
that's
why
and
that,
ultimately
they
were
not
prosecuted
for
that,
and
so
you
know
clearly
there
has
to
be
some
recognition
here
that
especially
these
folks
with
a
lot
of
experience
who
are
going
around
kind
of
the
serial
property
theft,
crews
that
are
out
there,
we
got
to
be
able
to
help
connect
the
dots
and
really
stop
them,
because
just
a
couple
of
individuals
can
really
wreak
havoc
on
a
large
area,
and
so
surely
there
must
be
a
way.
I
We
can
utilize
these
bait
programs
because
they're
being
utilized
in
other
cities
and
whether
that's
auto,
whether
that's
vehicles
that
are
primed
for
auto
theft,
that
we
can
show
individuals
had
to
put
some
effort
and
intent
into
getting
inside
of
or
or
whether
it's
bikes
that
are
locked
up.
But
I
mean
even
with
this
idea,
around
prosecutors
kind
of
bulking.
I
At
this
to
me,
it
seems
inconceivable
that
you
wouldn't
prosecute
somebody
who
jumped
in
a
car-
that's
not
theirs,
just
because
it
was
unlocked
and
started
it
up,
even
though
there
might
not
be
keys
in
there
and
then
drove
it
away
and
got
busted
for
that,
like
that's,
not
something
a
normal
person
does
clearly
that's
something
that
is
criminal
behavior
and
especially
if
an
individual
has
a
repeat
history
of
this,
I
would
think
that
would
be
a
slam
dunk
case
for
prosecutors.
I
So
can
you
please
explain
a
little
more
for
us,
even
though
there
are
those
challenges?
What
are
the
ways
we
can
use
bait
items
and
what
ways
are
you
willing
to
expand
the
use
of
bait
items?
Have
you
looked
at
this?
What
could
we
do
to
support
that,
because
it
seems
like
a
way
to
really
get
at
trying
to
catch
these
individuals
who
are
really
repeats
offenders
that
are
going
out
there
and
just
night
after
night
after
night,
going
and
victimizing
multiple
individuals
and
and
finding
a
way
to
get
them
off
the
streets.
E
Madam
chair
council,
member
johnson,
no
it's
it's
a
great
question.
What
I'd
like
to
do
at
the
request
of
the
madam
chair
is
if,
if
that
could
be
also
added
to-
and
maybe
it's
through
more
appropriately
councilmember
cunningham
is
chair
of
the
public
safety
health
to
come
back.
I'd
like
to
delve
in
a
little
bit
with
our
city
attorney
on
this
item
is
on
this
as
well,
not
not
being
of
a
legal
mind.
E
I
can
tell
you
what
just
it
has
been
frustrating
for
for
many
in
our
communities
as
in
this.
I
know
that
you
have
brought
this
up
in
the
past
councilmember
johnson,
about
possibly
using
this.
E
I
know
that
there's
been
conversations
even
over
in
second
precinct
near
the
university
of
minnesota,
with
bikes
and
other
things,
and
so,
if,
if
so,
if
I
could
do
some
more
follow-up
with
our
city
attorney's
office
and
come
back
with
some
more
concrete
legal
means
and
how
we
might
be
able
to
to
answer
to
your
question
but
see
how
that
plays
into
operationally
how
we
might
be
able
to
utilize
it.
I
Thank
you
chief.
I
appreciate
that
and
I
just
really
encourage
you
to
to
leverage
this.
I
I
think
it's
a
way
where
we
can
work
smarter,
not
harder,
but
smarter,
the
ideal
to
work
harder
too,
but
I
think
it's
something
that
can
be
very
effective
if
it's
well
thought
out
and
properly
employed-
and
I
don't
know
where
my
colleagues
are
on
this-
but
I
would
certainly
be
interested
in
bringing
forward
a
budget
amendment
if
we
need
to
to
help
fund
something
like
this,
and
I
think,
by
the
way
we
can
distinguish
between
those
that
are,
you
know,
seeing
something
that's
easy
to
grab
and
they're
like
a
first
time
offender
and
somebody-
that's
really
a
candidate
for
restorative
justice
program
versus
folks
that
are
out
there
night
after
night
after
night,
with
very
lengthy
criminal
histories
that
are
really
the
career
criminals
that
are
out
there
causing
such
mass
victimization
of
of
residents.
I
And
so
I
think,
there's
a
way
to
properly
balance
that
and
to
utilize.
This
kind
of
an
approach
that
could
be
effective
at
helping
reduce
these
crime.
Sprees
that
we're
seeing.
B
Thanks
councilmember
chief
I'll
just
intervene
here
and
say
I
am
tracking
all
of
these
particular
issues
and
items
that
council
members
are
are
raising
related
to
their
awards
or
their
specific
communities,
and
I
know
that
we
will
be
having
regular
presentations
and
follow
up
follow-ups
at
the
public
health
and
safety
committee
related
to
specifics
around
crime
and
safety
trends,
as
well
as
mpd's
prevention
and
response.
I
am
hopeful
that
we'll
be
able
to
spend
some
time
on
the
staffing
questions
which
are
so
critical,
which
I
see
is
at
the
end
of
the
presentation.
E
Madam
chair,
I
just
was
gonna,
say
too
and
knowing
the
the
length
of
the
the
presentation
and
knowing
how
important
I
I
if
I
could
certainly
ask
for
your
permission,
I
I
think
it
would
be
very
good
to
get
the
data
piece
in
here
through
the
it,
because
I
really
think
that
will
help
drill
down,
and
that
was
many
of
the
questions
that
our
council
members
had
as
well.
E
K
No,
I
wanted
to
just
create
a
level
set
quickly
to
the
staffing
points
that
chief
you
just
brought
up.
I
wanted
to
make
sure
there
are
a
lot
of
there's
a
lot
of
noise
in
the
community
right
now
that
we
are
down
to
this
many
officers
per
one
of
your
slides.
That
was
posted
last
night
and
I
think
from
what
you've
said
from
my
own
understanding
your
point
of
the
slide
that
I
don't
know
that
I've
seen
broadcast
yet
of
535.
K
So,
given
the
about
a
hundred
people
that
are
are
in
the
process
of
leaving
your
department,
you
have
reorganized
you
and
the
mayor
have
reorganized
to
focus
on
a
patrol
and
an
investigative
capacity
right
and
in
the
past
I
think
we've
had
about
525
sworn
patrol
staff
in
your
department
like
last
year,
maybe-
and
please
correct
me
and
help,
but
but
this
is
not-
this
is
not
dramatically
down,
but
rather
this
is
because
you
have
reorganized
the
department
to
have
to
focus
on
this.
Is
that
correct.
E
Madam
chair
customer
promising
that
is
absolutely
correct,
as
there
have
been
shifts
and
changes
in
terms
of
of
resources
within
the
entire
organization.
E
B
Yes,
I
I'm
sorry
I
had
intended
to
call
on
on
you
and
order
council
vice
president
jenkins
and
councilman
palmisano
to
see
if
the
questions
were
related
to
a
specific
issue
or
a
more
high-level
one
council.
Vice
president
jenkins.
D
Thank
you,
madam
president,
and
councilmember
promisano
and
chief
erdogando
it.
This
is
a
a
much
more
high
level
comment
or
or
question,
and
that
is
you
know.
How
are
we
going
to?
How
are
you
chief
and
all
of
us?
How
are
we
going
to
rid
our
department
of
people
who
are
engaged
in
white
supremacist
activities
organizations?
D
I
I
believe
that
this
is
creating
a
a
serious
concern
and
issue
in
mpd
and
in
police
departments
all
over
the
country,
and
we
need
to
take
steps
and
measures
to
rid
ourselves
of
these
individuals
who
associate
with
white
nationalist
groups,
white
supremacist
groups,
and
is
there
policies
that
we
can
put
in
place
in
our
hiring
decisions,
as
well
as
identifying
employees
currently
on
the
force?
Who
may
be
involved
in
this,
and
and
I'm
sure
that
this
is
a
question
for
for
our
city
attorney
as
well.
E
Madam
chair
council,
vice
president
jenkins,
thank
you
for
your
your
question,
so
I
never
want
to
have
any
employee
sworn
or
civilian
that
does
not
have
within
their
their
desire
the
capacity
to
serve
all
of
our
community
members
in
a
way
that
is
with
dignity
with
respect
without
favor
or
bias,
and
so
some
of
the
ways
that
I
will
continue
to
try
to
make
sure
that
we
have
in
place
within
the
mpd
are
very
competent
and
stringent
hiring
practices
from
the
recruitment
itself,
which
is
very
key
to
I'm.
E
Also
looking
at
ways
to
look
at
what
are
some
national
backpack
national
best
practices
in
terms
of
background
and
and
not
just
the
the
standardized
background,
but
one
where
some
of
the
some
of
the
areas
that
you
had
mentioned
is
their
way
to
track
or
try
to
identify.
E
If
individuals
who
are
potential
candidates
have
had
some
affiliation
or
associations
with
extremist
groups
or
those
types
of
things,
how
are
we
doing
the
best
we
can
to
to
identify
those
early
on
our
pre-employment
psychologists,
making
sure
that,
if
there's
components
within
those
testings
that
are
done,
that
look
at
biases
from
different
standpoints?
We
wanna,
I
wanna,
make
sure
that
we're
doing
all
that
we
can
not
only
as
it
relates
to
mpd,
but
what
are
some
of
those
national
best
practice
standards,
but,
lastly,
you
know
ones.
E
I
need
to
make
sure
that
every
employee
is
adhering
to
our
department's
core
values
and
beliefs,
but
I
also
know
that
beliefs
do
not
change,
people
actions
do,
and
so,
if
an
employee
should
conduct
themselves,
it
is
not
in
alignment
with
our
department's
beliefs
and
value
systems.
Then
I
will
take
action
to
make
sure
that
they
are
not
a
part
of
this
organization.
E
We
have
to
have
the
best
people
doing
this
job.
Our
communities
need
that
they
deserve
that,
and-
and
so
that
is
something
that
I
will
continue
to
make
sure
that
we're
doing.
But
I
hope
that
helps
answer
some
of
your
question.
E
B
B
So
maybe
we
can
make
sure
we
do
cover
some
of
that
here.
I
know
we
solicited
and
asked
a
lot
of
questions
that
council
members
were
able
to
submit
ahead
of
time
ahead
of
that
pogo
presentation
that
didn't
get
answered
there.
So
I
did
just
I
think
it's
one
of
the
key
themes
that
was
really
important
here.
So
I
think,
there's
a
big
chunk
of
slides
in
this
in
the
middle
here
of
this
presentation
that
are
about
about
this
issue.
B
That
comes
the
vice
president
just
raised
specifically,
but
also
kind
of
more
generally
about
how
chief
you're
you're
working
with
your
team
and
staff
to
think
about
the
future
of
this
department
and
how
it
fits
into
our
overall
efforts
to
keep
everyone
in
our
community
safe.
E
Yes,
madam
chair
committee
members,
so
I
I
will
take
some
of
this
time
to
kind
of
go
over
that
and
please
manager
for
time
keeping
say.
Let
me
know
if
I
need
to
to
pause
or
or
stop
for
the
time
being,
but
very
important
question.
What
do
I
see
as
the
future
of
the
mpd?
E
E
E
E
So
what
are
some
of
those
things
that
I
see
in
terms
of
the
future?
Well,
I
know
that
when
we
talk
about
to
transformational
change,
there's
a
cost
associated
with
that,
and
that
means
that
if
we
know
that
we're
going
to
at
least
have
some
form
of
armed
individuals
carrying
out
an
oath
to
protect
our
communities,
they're
going
to
have
to
be
supported,
and
that
means
whether
that's
through
technology,
whether
that's
through
to
training
and
whether
that's
through
resources
of
personnel.
E
That
is
something
that
we
have
to
have
those
conversations,
and
I
believe
we
all
have
had
those
conversations
over
the
past
a
couple
of
years.
I
also
want
to
note
that
change
takes
time,
but
we
must
remain
focused.
The
things
that
I
want
to
do
to
make
sure
that
we
are
transforming
this
department
and
creating
a
new
mpd
will
not
take
place
overnight.
E
It's
going
to
take
a
lot
of
hard
work
and,
and
quite
frankly,
those
seeds
have
changed
that
I
need
to
plant
now
when
they
come
to
fruition.
I
will
not
be
your
chief,
but
plans
don't
stay
stagnant.
Our
department
evolves,
our
communities
evolve,
and
so
what
that
plan
is
today
will
not
be
the
same
plan.
Nor
should
it
be
five
years
from
now
our
city
is
going
to
continue
to
evolve,
and
so
those
plans
must
also
evolve
as
well.
E
We
have
to
leverage
our
partners.
I
talked
about
some
of
those
partners.
Today
we
have
to
leverage
the
the
strength
and
resources
of
the
office
of
violence
prevention,
they
do
great
work
and
they
do
important
work,
but
we
also
have
to
leverage
our
other
partners,
whether
that's
the
hindi
county
sheriff's
office,
whether
that's
our
metro
transit
police
department.
We
are
all
in
this
together,
and
so
that
will
be
something
that
we
have
to
do.
E
While
I
know
that
our
wonderful
director
of
I.t,
mr
foddy,
is
sitting
in
queue,
but
data
tells
our
story,
and
this
has
evolved
as
well,
and
we
can
certainly
continue
to
do
a
better
job,
and
I
think
we
are
on
that
track
with
the
great
leadership
and
assistance
of
our
city
clerk
casey
carl.
The
data
tells
our
story
good
or
bad.
E
When
we
get
that
information
and
get
that
data,
we
are
again
making
sure
that
our
it
department
has
that
and
making
sure
that
we
are
very
transparent,
that
that
data
gets
out
there
to
our
communities
and
also
obviously
to
our
elected
officials,
so
that
you
can
make
the
best
informed
decisions
with
that
data.
E
I
also
want
to
say
that
very
unique
individuals
that
come
into
this
line
of
work
for
service
both
are
sworn
in
civilian
and
they
do
so
with
a
dedication
and
a
desire
to
to
make
life
better
for
for
those
that
they
serve
and
many
people
they
will
never
even
know,
and
we
need
to
continue
to
support
them
in
that
they
are
part
of
the
larger
city
of
minneapolis
enterprise.
E
And
in
order
for
this
to
succeed,
we
have
to
make
sure
that
we
lean
in-
and
many
of
you
do.
That
often
you're
reaching
out
you're
you're
sending
thank
you
letters
to
your
precinct
inspectors
and
complimenting
them
on
on
some
great
work
that
these
folks
continue
to
do
under
very
challenging
times,
and
so
so
that
support
is
definitely
going
to
be
needed.
E
B
L
Thank
you,
madam
chair
chief.
I'm
I'm
curious.
This
is
this
question
is
probably
not
something
that's
on
your
slide
right
now
and
I
apologize
for
that.
But
it's
something
that
happened
in
our
ward
over
the
weekend,
where
we
had
50
gun
shots
near
38th
and
chicago
and,
and
that
seems
to
kind
of
be
the
the
new
norm
for
that
area.
L
We
also
had
a
young
person
killed
there.
I
think
after
the
bullet
had
gone
through
two
other
people
or
or
touched
to
other
people.
L
You
know
there's
a
lot
of
theories
about
why
the
the
gun
violence
is
happening,
and
some
of
it
involves
you
know,
organized
crime
that
might
be
in
conflict
with
each
other
or
with
others.
Other
groups
that
are
being
that
are
wanting
to
be
present
in
the
area.
L
Other
theories
are
around
specific
business
owners,
creating
those
conditions
to
push
the
city
to
reopen
that
intersection,
because
they
need
that
traffic
flow
to
be
able
to
cover
up
other
criminal
acts
that
they're
involved
in
and
so
there's.
You
know
there's
a
lot
of
theories
about
why
the
increase
in
gun,
violence
and
and
why
it's
become
so
visible
and
constant
in
areas
like
38th
and
chicago
37th
and
elliott.
L
Certainly
we
all
remember
the
the
woman
who
was
pregnant,
who
was
who
was
shot
and
killed
and
and
later
her
baby
died.
The
the
hospital
was
able
to.
L
Essentially
extract
the
baby
out
of
her
body,
but
but
later
the
baby
ended
up
passing
away
too.
So
I
acknowledge
that
the
the
moment
we're
in
right
now
the
conditions
for
mpd
are
not
very
ripe
for
success
for
a
lot
of
different
reasons:
internal
external.
L
So
my
question
to
you
is
more
about
what
can
we,
as
a
council,
do
to
help
you
become
more
successful
in
this
work?
And
what
can
communities
do
to
help
reduce
that
gun
violence?
L
Because
I
you
know,
I
I
tell
my
residents
to
call
9-1-1
and
to
tell
them
to
call
mpd,
because
that
is
the
the
function
that
we
have
to
respond
to
gun
violence.
I'm
I'm
not
going
to
call
a
community
patrol
to
respond
to
that.
You
know
they're
they're
not
supposed
to
be
armed
and
I'm
not
trying
to
encourage
them
to
be
armed.
L
L
E
Madam
chair
councilman
mcconnell.
Thank
you
so
much
for
the
for
the
question.
It's.
I
know
that
our
entire
city
is
going
through
a
lot
right
now,
and
obviously
the
gun,
violence
and
and
how
it's
impacting
our
communities
is
is
is
adding
to
that.
E
One
of
the
things
that
I
think
that
would
be
very
helpful
is
to
arrange
a
conversation
with
myself,
the
precinct
inspectors
and
the
commanders,
even
from
an
investigative
standpoint,
to
hear
where
our
strengths
currently
lie
right
now
in
terms
of
the
reduction
in
prevention
strategies,
but
where
we
also
may
need
some
other
assistance
and
I
think,
having
a
real
candid
conversation
about
that
would
be
very
helpful.
E
I
know
that
you
and
I've
certainly
been
in
conversation
with
you
as
it
relates
to
38th
in
chicago,
and
certainly
obviously,
council
vice
president
jenkins
and
a
mixture
of
the
different
emotions
and
feelings
that
some
of
your
constituents
are
feeling
over
in
that
area.
E
There
are
those
that
are
feeling
apprehensive
about
calling
mpd
and-
and
there
are
those,
as
I
mentioned
earlier
in
the
conversation-
are
feeling
held
hostage
by
the
environment
in
the
situation
that's
occurring
there,
and
I
think
we
need
to
have
candid
conversations,
and
I
think
we
can.
I
think
we
can
do
both.
E
I
think
we
can
work
on
ways
in
which
pmpd
can
get
better
because
there's
one
thing
I
also
know
too
high
crime
and
lack
of
legitimacy
cannot
exist
in
the
npd
if
we
have
high
crime
and
we
have
communities
that
don't
view
us
as
legitimate
that
that
that's
a
recipe
for
failure,
we
need
to
be
feud
and
we
need
to
work
to
gain
that
mutual
trust
and
respect
with
our
communities
where
they
see
us
as
legitimate,
where
they
trust
us
and
they
support
us
in
our
efforts,
and
we
have
to
do
that
the
same
and
treat
our
communities
with
respe
respect
and
dignity
and
have
that
trust
of
them.
E
That
is
the
path
we
need
to
focus
on
right
now,
in
my
estimation,
and
by
the
way
that
requires
compromise
from
from
all
sides,
and
that
requires
me,
as
chief
to
look
at
how
I
can
do
things
differently
that
are
not
in
the
traditional
norms
working
to
also
what
does
reimagining
public
safety
or
community
safety
look
like,
and-
and
I
want
to
continue
to
do-
that-
I
think
we've
made
some
efforts
in
that
that
may
also,
quite
frankly,
councilmember
connell.
E
That
may
also-
and
I
I
applaud
your
courage
for
asking
the
question
too-
that
may
mean
you
making
commitments
that
might
be
uncomfortable
for
some
of
those
constituents
that
you
represent,
but
if
our
ultimate
goal
is
to
have
true
community
safety,
I
will
tell
you
right
now:
we
have
to
work
together
in
that
effort.
We
have
to
be
bold.
E
We
have
to
be
courageous,
we
have
to
be
vulnerable,
but
we
have
to
work
together
in
that
effort,
and
I
think
that
that
will
be
a
good
starting
point
to
have
those
conversations.
Yeah.
L
A
Thank
you,
councilman,
and,
and
thank
you
chief,
I
really
you'll
see
in
the
comments
that
you
know.
Other
folks
really
appreciate
your
comments
that
you
just
made.
I
included,
I
think,
on
that.
That
actually
gets
very
much
to
my
question.
I
I
think
I
really
appreciate
you
bringing
up
the
legitimacy.
A
It
is
also
your
comment
about
having
data
tell
a
story,
what
I
would
add
to
that
and
really
kind
of,
as
as
because
I
think
we
need
to
help
it
all
together,
and
I
think
just
some
suggestion
would
be
to
just
have
some
context
around
the
data.
You
know
if
we
want
data
to
tell
our
story
we're
it's
not
you're,
not
having
that
effect
right
now.
Right
now.
Data
without
context
is
not
helpful
to
people.
A
A
They
want
to
do
stuff
the
old-fashioned
way
and
they're
not
going
to
handle
any
reforms,
and
that's
that's
not
the
vision
for
the
city
and
then
others
are
saying,
look
they're
fed
up
with
something
else
and
they
they
need
to
leave,
and
so
it's
having
a
context
of
that
being
able
to
say
we
are
looking
into
that.
The
reasons
why?
A
Because
I
think
that's
the
important
question
if
you're
worried
about
hiring
and
recruitment
you're
wondering
why
people
are
leaving
too
and
what
that
vision
is,
and
I
think
that's
been
the
missing
piece
for
people
to
hear
about
that.
Also
on
the
legitimacy
like
I,
I
always
feel
really
much
better
after
we
talk
because
you
know
you're
you're,
dealing
with
like
this
is.
What
we
need
to
do
for
disciplines
is
what
we
need
to
do
for
this,
but
having
the
data
on
and
that's
why
this
many
people
are
on
disciplinary
leave.
A
You
know
it's
we've
had
meetings
before
where
I've
asked
you
know.
What's
been
this
mpd's
action,
I
want
to
see
mpd
move
forward
on
that.
You
know
when
we
have
video
of
police
officers
in
uniform
with
their
cop
car,
pepper,
spraying
peaceful
protesters.
I
want
to
see
that
mpd
took
action
swiftly
before
we
get
sued
before
someone
else
happens
and
I
want
to
see.
I
think
it's
helpful
to
continue
on
you
know
getting
that
data
and
context
out.
E
Madam
chair
customer
trader,
thank
you
for
for
that,
and
I
know
that
you
have
been
someone
that
has
championed
about
the
data.
I
I
feel
madam
chair.
I
feel
really
bad
because
I
know
that
our
director
foddy
has
been
sitting
in
cute,
and
I
know
I
knew
that
this
data
was
is
so
important
to
this
conversation.
E
I
think,
if
I
could
manage
here
just
quickly,
some
other
things
in
terms
of
of
of
creating
this
new
mpd
and
moving
forward
one
of
the
things
we
have
not
done,
and
all
of
you
have
to
some
extent
talk
about
the
trauma
that
our
communities
have
faced.
E
I
all
also
have
been
really
focused
over
the
last
couple
of
years
on
the
wellness
of
our
employees,
and
I
think
that
sometimes
gets
overlooked,
and
when
we
have
men
and
women
who
are
out
there
dedicating
their
lives
to
responding
to
our
communities
and
meeting
them
where
they
are,
we
we
often
have
overlooked
and
quite
frankly
and
sadly
stigmatized
the
the
the
trauma
that
our
our
men
and
women
go
through.
Councilman
palmisano
has
has
been
a
fierce
advocate
in
terms
of
that
officer.
E
Wellness,
piece
and-
and
that
is
gonna,
also
be
crucial
as
we
move
forward
in
creating
this
new
mpd.
The
data
piece
again
is
so
critical
and
I
met
I'm
sure
I
don't
know
if
the
time
allows,
but
that
I
think,
would
help
also
support
and
answer
some
of
the
questions
as
we
move
forward.
But
I
want
to
thank
house
member
schrader
for
his
comments.
B
Thank
you
and
I
think
the
reality
is
with
the
time
we
have
and
what
we
have
to
cover
that
it
will
make
sense
to
postpone
the
data
portion
of
this
to
either
the
pogo
meeting.
That's
coming
up
later
this
week
or
a
future
study
session,
which
I
know
we're
planning
to
have
on
this
topic.
So,
although
the
the
information
is
is
available
publicly-
and
I
know
we're
really
appreciative
that
that
was
ready
for
today
as
well-
I'm
sure
it
took
a
lot
to
get
that
all
ready
council,
member
ellison
and
then
cunningham.
G
Thank
you,
council.
President
bender,
thank
you
chief.
You
know
I
I
had
a
question.
You
know.
I
guess
two
question
questions.
One
is
around
the
the
the
our
ability
to
affect
the
violence.
That's
happening.
You
know,
I
guess
I'm
I'm
I'm
tempted
to
ask.
Does
this
type
of
enforcement
work
you
talked
about?
We
had
the
federal
task
force.
I
think
that
the
community
certainly
doesn't
understand
or
or
know
whether
or
not
that
had
any
effect
on
the
violence
that
we
experienced.
G
I
know
that
you
know
it
kind
of
the
amount
of
violence
that
we're
experiencing
is
is
overwhelming
for
everyone
in
the
city.
I
know
for
for
yourself
for
the
mayor
for
for
councilman
cunningham
and
I
on
the
north
side.
G
You
know,
as
it
pertains
to
the
violence
on
the
north
side
and
and
yet
we're
still
at
this
thing,
where
I
think
you
know
my
where
I
had
predecessors
who
had
worse
years
than
this,
which
I
can't
imagine,
because
this
is
it's
awful
to
see
these
kind
of
homicides
coming
through,
but
you
named
the
strategies
and
and
and
the
resources
that
we're
deploying
to
that.
G
Is
it
able
to
have
any
kind
of
effect
because
it
seems
like
we
pour
money
into
it,
but
we're,
but
we're
not
seeing
we're
not
seeing
it
have
an
effect,
and
I
think
that
that
will
probably
have
less
to
do
with
you
know
the
department's
competence
and
and
just
more
does
this
style
of
public
safety
have
any
effect
on
violence?
It
feels
like
it's
not
so
that
that's
sort
of
one
one
question
that
that
I'll
put
out
there
and
the
other
thing.
G
I
know
we
didn't
quite
get
to
this,
but
I
was
sort
of
looking
over
the
the
the
2016
use
of
force
policy
and
the
use
of
force
policy
that
that
that
we
put
out
recently
that
you
and
the
mayor
put
out
recently
and-
and
I
was
looking
sort
of-
I
was
kind
of
comparing
side
by
side.
Some
of
some
of
the
changes
that
I'm
seeing.
I
know
that
in
2016
the
rewrite
of
the
use
of
force
policy
was.
It
was
a
step
in
the
right
direction.
G
It
was
a
good
move,
but
obviously
concepts
like
the
sanctity
of
life
and
de-escalation.
Didn't
penetrate,
you
know
the
minds
of
of
of
folks
like
shelvin,
you
know,
and
do
we
think
that
this
new
use
of
force
policy
is
gonna,
penetrate
the
minds
of
of
of
the
rank
and
file
in
a
way
in
a
way
that'll
keep
community
members
safe.
So
those
are
the
two
questions
I
have.
E
D
E
Councilmember
ellison.
Thank
you
for
your
your
question
very,
very
good
questions.
So
is
this
strategy
going
to
work
so
here's?
What
I
can
tell
you
is
that
too
often
we
as
police
departments,
we
are
dealing
in
a
reactionary
mode.
We
have
oftentimes
come
to
finding
crime
as
opposed
to
preventing
it
and
when
we
have
a
when
we're
experiencing
what
we're
experiencing
now
in
our
city,
as
I
mentioned,
we're
inching
close
to
almost
400
individuals,
community
members
who've
been
traumatized
by
gunshot,
wound
violence.
E
E
We
have
to
do
better,
but
one
thing
I
would
say
that
we
we
need
to
explore
and
I,
as
chief
want
to
explore,
is-
and
it's
built
on
this
reactionary
mode
that
we
tend
to
get
in,
is
if
our
lives
and
our
community
members
lives
truly
matter.
One
of
the
things
that
we
don't
do
is
we
don't
go
back
and
dissect
what
led
up
to
this
path.
E
So,
for
example,
when
a
plane
crashes
there's
this
federal
agency,
the
ntsb
that
comes
out
and
they
dissect
everything
from
back
to
where
that
plane
was
built,
whether
the
nuts
and
bolts
were
right
and
everything
they
they,
they
do
an
analysis
of
of
what
could
have
possibly
led
up
to
that.
E
If
our
lives
in
this
city
truly
matter,
we
need
to
do
that
currently,
right
now,
we
do
not
have
a
national
center
that
evaluates
that
gets
data
about
whether
it's
officer
involved
shootings,
whether
it's
about
violence
in
our
communities
when
we
have,
if,
if
we
just
stay
status
quo
right
now,
we
will
end
this
year
with
numbers
that
are
absolutely
unconscionable,
that
we
should
have
in
terms
of
community
violence.
E
But
we
will
go
on
to
the
next
year
and
we
won't
do
a
deep
dive
as
a
city
as
to
what
caused
all
of
those
councilmember
cunningham
the
tragedy
of
the
17
year
old.
If
we
don't
do
anything,
we
will
move
on
and
that
name
and
that
child
will
be
lost,
it'll
be
a
footnote
to
a
crime
stat
we
need
to
have,
I
believe,
strongly.
We
need
to
have
a
national
database
that
researches
these
crime
in
our
communities
and
even
officer
involved
shootings.
E
So
we
need
to
do
that
at
the
very
least.
We
need
to
do
that
as
a
city,
I'm
very
proud
of
the
work
that
was
groundbreaking,
customer
ellison
that
our
attorney
general
ellison
had
convened
last
year,
and
I
represented
our
department
as
a
part
of
the
officer-involved
shooting
task
force
and
there'll
be
more
work
to
come
from
that.
E
We
need
something
I
believe,
and
I
and
I
believe
that
ovp
could
be
a
mechanism
for
that,
but
we
we
need
to
do
a
research
and
we
need
to
do
an
analysis
on
what's
leading
up
to
this
violence.
What
causes,
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
what
causes
young
people
to
to
feel
that
the
only
way
that
they
can
be
heard
or
be
seen
or
act
out
is,
is
with
guns,
what's
bringing
guns
into
our
communities.
E
So
that
is
work
that
that
I
think
that
needs
to
be
done
and
and
until
that
work
needs
to
be
done.
Sadly,
we
will
oftentimes,
as
police
departments
be
in
a
reactionary
mode.
We
will
do
our
best
to
instead
of
finding
the
crime
try
to
prevent
it,
but
but
there's
certainly
more
that
we
need
to
have
happen.
Regarding
your
second
piece
on
the
use
of
boards
policies
that
came
out
from
2016
and
now
the
most
the
most
recent
one,
I
believe
it
will
be
helpful.
E
I
believe
that
we
are
reporting
more
uses
of
force,
everything
from
holstering
and
pointing
your
weapon
at
someone
that
we
had
never
done
before.
E
We
are
also
making
sure
that
it's
important
to
de-escalate
situations
and
if
it's
important
to
de-escalate
situations,
we
should
be
documenting
that
and
so,
but
I
want
to
go
back
again
that
we
can
have
all
the
policies
and
training
and
those
are
important,
but
we
really
have
to
make
sure
that
we
support
those
through
our
actions
and-
and
we
continue
to
make
sure
we
have
with
us-
we'll
continue
to
work
on
the
best
policies.
E
But
we
have
to
make
sure
we
have
the
right
people,
the
best
people
doing
this
here,
that
they're
supported
and
good
behavior,
supported
and
and
that
behavior
that
goes
against
our
values
and
our
beliefs.
That
again,
that's
dealt
with
through
action,
and
so
that's
my
response.
Customer
allison.
G
Thank
you
for
that
response.
I
just
one
follow
up
question
to
the
to
my
first
question.
What
is
is:
does
that
does
that
mechanism
to
to
diagnose
the?
Why
of
the
violence
that
we're
seeing
out
in
the
community?
Does
that
exist,
or
is
that?
Are
you
saying
that
that's
something
that
we
as
a
country
as
a
as
a
state,
would
need
to
build
that
kind
of
apparatus?
Are
you
saying
that
exists
now,
but
we
just
don't.
E
Madam
chair
to
customer
ellison
so
for
an
example
in
a
tragic
sad
reality:
the
28
year
old
female
who
was
five
months
pregnant
and
lost
her
life
and
the
baby's
life
to
gun
violence.
E
E
The
gun,
violence
that
broke
up
earlier
this
summer,
there's
there's
really
I
mean
we
again.
We
are
in
a
role
to
make
sure
that
we're
we're
responding
that
we
bring
people
to
come,
but
but
we
are
going
to
embark
upon
almost
400
individuals
in
our
community
shot
and
wounded
to
gun
violence.
Are
there
conversations
now
about?
How
are
we
dissecting?
How
are
we
analyzing
how
that
occurred
right
now?
No,
and
I'm
certainly
not
have
not
been
a
part
of
those
conversations.
If.
G
G
I
I
I
think,
that's
I
think,
that's
incredibly
astute
not,
and
I
and
I
agree,
and
but
I
do.
I
also
think
that
there
are
folks
who
think
that
that,
by
simply
pouring
more
resources
into
our
policing
infrastructure,
which
again
is
inherently
designed
to
find
crime,
which
is
not
a
bad
thing
we
need
we
got
to
find.
G
We
have
to
find
it,
but
it's
not
preventative
right,
like
that's
what
we're
talking
about
that
this
mechanism,
not
the
end,
we're
not
talking
about
individuals,
we're
talking
about
this
mechanism
of
policing
is
not
designed
to
to
prevent,
and
yet
I
think
that
there
are
folks
who
think
that,
just
with
enough
police
on
the
ground,
I
don't
know
exactly
what
that
that
you
would
that
we
would
be
preventing
this
violence,
but
I
think
you're,
absolutely
right.
G
If
we
go
400,
you
know
with
400
people
shot
if
we
end
this
year,
not
really
understanding.
Why,
which
is
which
it
sounds
like.
We
will
to
me
that
that
feels
like
an
incredible
loss.
It
feels
like
you,
agree
with
that,
and
so
so
thank
you
for
answering
the
question.
H
Thank
you,
madam
president.
So
a
little
bit
to
council
member
ellison's
point,
I
will
say
that
we
do
know
what
the
risk
factors
are
for
violence,
and
we
also
know
what
the
protector
protective
factors
are
as
well.
That
is
through
the
public
health
approach
to
public
safety
that
has
been
identified.
H
What
we
are
missing
is
a
systematic,
researched
approach
to
being
able
to
essentially
sort
of
after
the
fact
be
able
to
identify
where
the
system
failed.
For
us
to
be
able
to
build
that
systematic
approach.
The
health
department,
for
example,
has
their
epidemiology
and
research
unit
with
the
division
within
the
health
department.
We
would
need
to
really
have
a
very
like
we
would
need
to
build
that
out.
H
Capacity-Wise,
something
that
I've
always
wanted
for
us
to
do
was
to
do
a
domestic
violence,
homicide
review,
fatality
review
so
that
we
can
figure
out
where
we
failed.
The
victims
who
ultimately
lost
their
lives
at
the
hands
of
their
partners,
which
some
of
the
pregnant
women
who
have
most
of
the
pregnant
women
who
have
been
murdered
this
summer
have
been
murdered
by
their
partners
and
we're
not
really
evaluating
systematically.
H
We
know
why
from
a
public
health
approach,
but
we
so
if
that
I
agree
100,
that
this
is
something
that
needs
to
that
we
need
to
create,
and
that
is
something
that
will
require
additional
resources
and
a
systemic
flesh
out.
So
I
just
wanted
to
speak
to
that.
We
do
know
what
the
risk
factors
are
and
the
protective
factors
we
just
need
to
be
able
to
figure
out
the
context
of
how
those
apply
within
the
within
minneapolis
and
these
individual
incidents.
H
I
will
also
to
go
back
to
something
that
you
spoke
of
chief
to
the
how
you
envision
the
future
of
mpd.
I
I
really
just
want
to
push
back
on
the
idea
of
the
seeds
of
change
and
that
those
seeds
will
not
come
to
fruition.
H
While
you
are
still
chief,
I
would
say
that
what
we
have
heard
pretty
clearly
is
that
folks
want
to
see
that
change
now
and
and
the
a
lot
of
the
pushback
that
we
have
received
as
a
council
is
that
there
is
this
transformational
systemic
change
that
is
coming,
and
that
is
not
the
same
as
planting
the
seeds.
I
understand
that
there
are
changes
that
are
happening,
but
what
we
have
now
that
incremental
change
is
not
what
folks
have
asked
for,
and
that's
not
what
we
want
to
see
as
elected
officials
either.
H
So
I
just
want
to
name
that
that
conflict
and
that
in
that
perspective-
and
I
think
it
also,
though,
speaks
to
the
fact
that,
generally
speaking,
just
kind
of
taking
a
step
back
looking
at
that
at
this
whole
pers,
this
whole
presentation
and
conversation.
Generally
speaking,
I
think
that
the
it's
clear
that
the
reality
is
that
mpd
obviously
cannot
deal
with
these
problems
alone.
H
H
But
that's
because
that's
the
only
system
we
have
you
know
we
have
the
office
of
violence
prevention
and
they
are
doing
amazing
work
on
this
scale
and
right
now
like
what
we
do
is
that
we
fall
back
to
what
we're
socially
conditioned
to
believe,
which
is
that
the
police
are
going
to
swoop
in
to
save
us
absolutely
law
enforcement
plays
a
role
but
leaning
into
what
we
know
or
what
we've
done
and
how
we've
gotten
here.
H
H
This
presentation
has
just
been
even
more
confirmation
from
me
with
my
commitment
for
transforming
community
safety,
because
we
need
that
in
that
comprehensive
approach
that
includes
prevention,
intervention
and
re-entry
strategies.
We
need
that
and
the
whole
cycle
of
that
is
prevention,
intervention
enforcement
and
re-entry.
So
enforcement
plays
a
role.
H
What
I
am
sort
of
flabbergasted
by
right
now
is
colleagues
who,
a
very
short
time
ago,
who
were
calling
for
abolition,
are
now
suggesting.
We
should
be
putting
more
funding
and
resources
into
mpd.
We
know
that
this
is
not
producing
different
outcomes.
I'm
not
saying
that
the
the
mpd
is
resourced
as
it
is,
but
if
we
build
out
a
comprehensive
system
of
community
safety
that
has
prevention,
intervention
and
re-entry,
we
are
taking
the
burden
off
of
police
officers
for
having
to
respond
to
everything.
H
In
addition,
if
we
have
these
systems
in
place,
we
are
getting
ahead
of
the
violence.
That's
why
I
have
advocated
so
strongly
for
the
violence
interrupters,
because
if
they
are
interrupting
the
violence
before
the
gun,
the
guns
are
being
fired.
Then
officer.
The
mpd
is
not
having
to
respond
to
that
gun
violence.
So
we
don't.
H
We
need
to
restructure
and
right
size
so
that
mpd
is
able
to
focus
on
enforcing
the
law
and
responding,
rather
than
continuing
to
say
we
need,
for
you
all
to
figure
out
how
to
get
ahead
of
it.
When
we
have
community
experts
community-based
experts,
who
should
be
leading
that
work-
and
I
and
and
I've
heard
you
say
that
time
and
time
again,
chief
like
we
can't
arrest
our
way
out
of
this,
we
can't
do
this
alone.
You
know
when
I've
asked
what
is
the
vision
of
public
safety
in
our
city?
It
goes.
H
It
goes
to
really
addressing
structural
violence,
which
is
actually
the
most
dead
like
the
deadliest
form
of
violence,
which
is
the
unequal
distribution
of
resources
so
housing,
you,
you
bring
up
folks
being
stably
housed
people
having
career
opportunities
and
structural
violence
in
that
way
also
is
the
largest
risk
factor
for
future
violence,
community
and
family
based
violence.
H
We
can
address
those
things
through
policing,
so
this
has
just
you
know
been.
I
I
appreciate
you
being
here
and
us
being
in
conversation
about
the
specifics.
I
just
want
to
be
able
for
us
to
take
a
step
back
and
look
at
the
big
picture
of
re-anchor,
my
colleagues
in
remembering
that
this
is
a
reminder
that
we
need
to
be
taking
this
transforming
community
safety
work
seriously,
because
we
cannot
look
to
mpd
to
take
on
the
burden
of
all
of
the
work
to
be
addressed.
H
No
question
there
just
wanted
to
to
to
re-anchor
us.
Thank
you,
madam
president,
and
thank
you
chief.
B
Thank
you
all.
We
are
at
just
a
few
minutes
before
the
end
of
our
time,
and
I
do
want
to
keep
us
on
schedule
so
that
we
can
all.
You
know,
make
sure
that
I'm
sure
folks
have
things
scheduled
after
this.
So
I
know
that
we
brushed
past
a
lot
of
the
questions
that
had
been
asked
in
previous
meetings
by
council
members.
I
know
we
didn't
get
through
a
lot
of
the
information
that
had
been
prepared,
but
this
is
a
really
enormous
topic.
B
Obviously,
a
very
high
priority
for
all
of
us
at
the
city,
and
so
all
of
it
will
require
you
know
significant
follow-up.
I
do
want
to
just
summarize
a
few
things,
so
I
know
that
it
is
captured.
B
We
had,
at
the
beginning
of
our
time,
together
a
lot
of
specific
discussion
about
particular
patterns
that
we
are
seeing
a
pattern
around
juvenile
juvenile
juveniles,
committing
crime,
very
young
people
committing
crime
and
both
a
question
about
how
we
can
interrupt
those
cycles
for
the
victims
of
those
crimes,
as
well
as
how
we
can
understand
how
the
system
is
currently
working
to
support
our
young
people
and
how
we
can
improve,
and
so
in
order
to
get
to
both
of
those
outcomes.
B
We
had
some
questions
that
skirted
around
the
question
around
group
and
gang
violence,
and
I
think
we
would
benefit
from
future
updates
around
strategies
that
are
specific
to
group
and
gang
violence
to
councilman.
Cunningham's
point
I
think
most
effectively
would
be
covered
to
understand
how
we're
working
with
our
community
partners
and
violence
prevention,
as
well
as
mpd
work
and
how
that's
being
staffed
and
invested
in
made
a
very,
very
brief
discussion
about
the
staffing
questions
that
have
been
coming
up
with
some
clarification,
both
from
the
chief
and
councilmember
palmisano.
B
I
think
we
will
be
in
a
better
position
to
hear
from
all
of
the
staff
who
are
working
on
community
safety
in
the
new
public
health
and
safety
committee,
so
future
presentations
and
follow-ups
about
a
lot
of
this
work
will
be
going
to
that
committee
and
will
allow
for
some
of
that
cross,
departmental
work
to
be
presented.
I
do
think
we
are
challenged
in
this
work
because
these
things
are
in
silos
within
the
dif
different
individual
departments,
and
so
the
collaboration
that's
happening
is
happening
across
departments.
B
I
need
to
be
really
mindful
about
how
we
tee
up
these
presentations
so
that
we
can
capture
that
work
that
may
be
happening
across
the
departments,
so
that
mpd
isn't
trying
to
answer
questions
that
really
are
more
about
the
violence.
Prevention
work
that's
happening,
so
that
is
my
attempt
to
summarize
the
meeting.
Thank
you
chief
for
your
work
to
prepare
for
today,
and
I
know
all
the
staff
that
helped
thank
you
to
the
it
team
that
presented
the
work
about
data.
B
B
So
thanks
for
everyone
for
participating-
and
I
know
again,
this
will
be
a
topic
of
discussion
in
the
near
future,
as
we
all
work
to
make
sure
that
our
system
is
working
better
to
make
sure
that
every
single
person
in
our
community
is
safe,
that
the
trust
that
has
been
so
deeply
eroded
in
our
community
is
rebuilt
and
that
we
are
all
working
together
as
a
team
to
achieve
those
outcomes.
So
thanks
everyone
again
with
that,
I
will
direct
the
clerk
to
receive
and
file
the
presentation
that
came
forward
today
and
without
objection.