Current:Home > NewsAt least 11 Minneapolis officers disciplined amid unrest after George Floyd’s murder, reports show-LoTradeCoin
At least 11 Minneapolis officers disciplined amid unrest after George Floyd’s murder, reports show
View Date:2025-01-11 07:35:32
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — At least 11 Minneapolis police officers were disciplined for alleged policy violations amid the unrest that followed the murder of George Floyd, with penalties ranging from firings to reprimands, newly released documents show.
Police officials have been slow to release disciplinary reports resulting from the department’s response to the sometimes violent protests that erupted after Floyd was murdered by Derek Chauvin, a white former officer who knelt on the Black man’s neck for nearly 9 1/2 minutes, on May 25, 2020. A bystander video captured Floyd’s fading cries of “I can’t breathe.” His death forced a reckoning with police brutality and racism.
The recent releases were first reported Friday by the Star Tribune. The department doesn’t generally disclose the outcome of disciplinary cases until they’ve gone through the entire review and appeal process. It went more than a year before acknowledging even a written reprimand to one officer for talking to a reporter for GQ magazine without authorization about the “toxic culture” in the department after Floyd’s death.
The unsealed, sometimes heavily redacted reports are posted on a department dashboard on disciplinary decisions from a range of incidents. Some of the most serious sanctions handed down in cases related to the unrest came from an assault by police May 30, 2020, on Jaleel Stallings.
Officials with the officers’ union, the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis, did not immediately return a call seeking comment Friday.
Many details in the Stallings case came to light in earlier court cases, but the reports detail some of the reasons former Interim Police Chief Amelia Huffman gave for firing Officer Justin Stetson and suspending others. In the redacted report on Stetson, Huffman wrote that he used “unreasonable force” that could have resulted in “even more grave” injuries.
Stallings, an Army veteran with a permit to carry a gun, had fired three shots at an unmarked police van after Stetson shot him with a 40 mm “less lethal” round, the report noted. The officers were enforcing a curfew that night. When Stallings realized they were police, he dropped his gun, lay on the ground and did not resist. But Stetson kicked him in the face and in the head, punched him multiple times and slammed his head into the pavement, Huffman noted.
Stallings — who suffered a fracture of his eye socket, plus cuts and bruises — argued in resulting court cases that he thought civilians had attacked him, and that he fired in self-defense. Stetson last year pleaded guilty to assault and was given probation. The city agreed in 2022 to pay Stallings a $1.5 million settlement, after Stallings was acquitted of an attempted murder charge.
Other discipline arising from that incident included a 120-hour suspension for Officer Tyler Klund for kicking Stallings and for punching a man who was with Stallings that night in the head, and failure to activate his body camera. Huffman also handed down 80-hour suspensions for Officers Michael Pfaff and Michael Osbeck for their actions against the other man. Pfaff used his Taser on him nine times in less than a minute, she said.
Officer Kristopher Dauble got a 40-hour suspension for firing 40 mm rounds at pedestrians about a block away from where police confronted Stallings. Huffman said it was fortunate that nobody was injured as a result.
Sgt. Kevin Angerhofer, who oversaw SWAT teams in the area that night, got a 60-hour suspension for failing to conduct a proper force review.
An earlier report, signed by Medaria Arradondo, who was police chief when Floyd was killed, gave details on the attempted firing of Sgt. Ronald Stenerson, who sprayed a chemical agent into the face of Vice News journalist Michael Anthony Adams when he was already lying on his stomach, holding his press credentials for officers to see. Stenerson did not document his actions and did not activate his body camera, the report said. The Star Tribune reported previously that Stenerson contested his firing and stayed on the job before later resigning.
Arradondo said Stenerson’s actions were all the more egregious because he was a supervisor, so his conduct “cannot be tolerated or accepted.”
The reports also show that current Police Chief Brian O’Hara handed down suspensions last May of 10 to 40 hours against three officers who confronted protesters who blocked the Interstate 35W bridge over the Mississippi River in downtown Minneapolis on May 31, 2020.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Natural gas flares sparked 2 wildfires in North Dakota, state agency says
- Lightning strike kills Colorado rancher and 34 head of cattle
- 12 people injured after Qatar Airways plane hits turbulence on flight to Dublin
- Ayesha Curry Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby No. 4 With Stephen Curry
- 12 college students charged with hate crimes after assault in Maryland
- Border bill fails Senate test vote as Democrats seek to underscore Republican resistance
- Papua New Guinea government says Friday’s landslide buried 2,000 people and formally asks for help
- Jason Kelce Purrfectly Trolls Brother Travis Kelce With Taylor Swift Cat Joke
- Brian Austin Green’s Fiancée Sharna Burgess Celebrates Megan Fox’s Pregnancy News
- Jason Kelce Responds to Criticism Over Comments on Harrison Butker Controversy
Ranking
- NBC's hospital sitcom 'St. Denis Medical' might heal you with laughter: Review
- Taylor Swift adds three opening acts to her summer Eras Tour concerts in London
- Rangers captain Jacob Trouba addresses elbow vs. Panthers' Evan Rodrigues, resulting fine
- 3 people dead after wrong-way crash involving 2 vehicles east of Phoenix; drivers survive
- When do new 'Yellowstone' episodes come out? Here's the Season 5, Part 2 episode schedule
- Aaron Judge continues to put on show for the ages, rewriting another page in record book
- TSA sets new record for number of travelers screened in a single day
- Wisconsin judge sentences man to nearly 20 years in connection with 2016 firebombing incident
Recommendation
-
Noem’s Cabinet appointment will make a plain-spoken rancher South Dakota’s new governor
-
Hollywood movies rarely reflect climate change crisis. These researchers want to change that
-
First-place Seattle Mariners know what they're doing isn't sustainable in AL West race
-
Horoscopes Today, May 25, 2024
-
Dogecoin soars after Trump's Elon Musk announcement: What to know about the cryptocurrency
-
Indianapolis 500 weather updates: Start of 2024 race delayed by thunderstorms
-
Bear shot dead after attacking 15-year-old in Arizona cabin: Not many kids can say they got in a fight with a bear
-
American arrested for bringing ammo to Turks and Caicos released, others await sentencing