Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Minnesota

Showing Original Post only (View all)

question everything

(49,003 posts)
Sat Nov 28, 2020, 09:22 PM Nov 2020

Minneapolis momentum is being crushed by the crime wave - By Kate Mortenson [View all]

Elaine, a front-line health care worker in Minneapolis, was putting groceries in the trunk of her car recently, in a crowded parking lot at the Uptown Kowalski’s Market, giving her high-alert system a break, as most of us do when some benign activity consumes our attention. It was 5:15 p.m. A moment later, a car blaring loud music pulled up behind hers, trapping her at her own car’s trunk. Someone got out of the car and punched Elaine to the ground. An accomplice wrested her handbag from her arm. In the next instant, the car and assailants were gone. It was again a regular evening, just after dark, in a busy parking lot in Uptown.

The robbery had happened so fast that no one had even noticed. Elaine, my colleague’s mom, a 60-plus year-old woman, beaten and robbed, her eye already swelling shut, had to pull herself up from the ground and stumble into the store for help. The store security chief, Scott Nelson, experienced with this kind of crime, immediately began reviewing film from monitoring cameras at nearby businesses.

Committed to pursuing justice for Elaine, Nelson laments that we “need police service and we need more of it. South Minneapolis is worse than I’ve ever seen it.” He describes the surge of 20-plus attacks a day that are now striking people just going about their daily business, people like Elaine. Usually in a stolen car, perpetrators Nelson describes as “young teens, 12-to-14 years old” cruise from lot to lot in neighborhood business districts, waiting for a victim, “like a deer hunter sits in a tree.” When they are apprehended, Nelson says consequences are negligible. “I arrest the same people over and over. Nothing happens to them.”

My heart hurts to see so much media coverage about our city’s failure to protect its citizens. It hurts even more when you know someone who has been sacrificed by this crisis of leadership. Recently we heard the chief of police appealing that “we are bleeding” in unprotected neighborhoods (“City Council members, police chief clash over plans for outside help,” Nov. 13). This media coverage isn’t just local; Minneapolis is making national news, again and again, over the dangerous environment our politicians have amplified. On CBS’ “60 Minutes” and in the Washington Post, Minneapolis’ embarrassing, confused state about whom to serve, whether to protect and how to respond, has been revealed, increasing unchecked violence. As a citizen, I feel like a pawn in someone else’s power struggle.

In recent years many regional leaders and groups have invested in rebranding our region for a more vibrant future. We planned to use our built and natural environment to welcome a new generation of visitors, workers and residents. How I would love to have those days of blossoming possibility back.

Now our city’s future hangs in the balance. As we teeter between proclamations and inaction, women are attacked while running daily errands. Carjackings are perpetrated in broad daylight; my daughter witnessed one the other day as she walked her dog. A North Side community group is suing the city for holding the concept of safety hostage to the concept of reform. It is not viable to sacrifice one to the other. Surely we can achieve both?

https://www.startribune.com/minneapolis-momentum-is-being-crushed-by-the-crime-wave/573198901/

Kate Mortenson, former president and CEO of the 2019 Final Four Minneapolis Local Organizing Committee, is founder and CEO at iPondr, a digital media company.

26 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
I was looking at moving to Minneapolis or Portland. Put a check next to Portland. LizBeth Nov 2020 #1
This is such a garbage article. WhiskeyGrinder Nov 2020 #2
I think this is happening in other places too. LisaM Nov 2020 #3
It isn't their 'training'... OldBaldy1701E Nov 2020 #7
No, I don't want want more of "them". LisaM Nov 2020 #9
Absolutely not OldBaldy1701E Nov 2020 #21
No, you don't digress. I get it. LisaM Nov 2020 #22
Yes OldBaldy1701E Dec 2020 #23
And training would improve the profiling issue. LisaM Dec 2020 #24
Amen to that! (n/t) OldBaldy1701E Dec 2020 #26
My take on this is that there's a bunch of factors playing into it sboatcar Nov 2020 #4
I'm with you BainsBane Nov 2020 #6
Many police departments have bargaining units that are affiliated with the AFL-CIO. WhiskeyGrinder Nov 2020 #8
I agree, but if you look at the minneapolis police union sboatcar Nov 2020 #10
Sure, Bob Kroll is an asshole. But he's an asshole running a white supremacist institution that has WhiskeyGrinder Nov 2020 #12
So do you have an ideas for how it can be fixed? sboatcar Nov 2020 #13
As a police abolitionist, I'm a fan of tearing it all down. WhiskeyGrinder Nov 2020 #14
I think we need some level of law enforcement sboatcar Nov 2020 #15
A protection model thrives on an us/them mindset that results in uneven policing. WhiskeyGrinder Nov 2020 #16
Not this one BainsBane Nov 2020 #18
I know. WhiskeyGrinder Nov 2020 #19
The police are punishing us BainsBane Nov 2020 #5
Exactly! sboatcar Nov 2020 #11
Frey needs to go BainsBane Nov 2020 #17
I agree, I never liked him much, and he hasn't shown any decent leadership skills sboatcar Nov 2020 #20
I am a 911 dispatcher. I have worked with police for 20 years. the_sly_pig Dec 2020 #25
Latest Discussions»Region Forums»Minnesota»Minneapolis momentum is b...»Reply #0