Minneapolis, MN
Family Alleges Minneapolis Police Took DNA Sample From Child Without Consent
MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — A household says Minneapolis police took DNA samples from their youngster with out their consent.
They allege that experiences of gunfire at Phelps Park led to the teenager and two others to be detained. He was not charged with a criminal offense, however his DNA was taken with out parental consent.
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Now, members of the Unity in Group Mediation Staff (UCMT) and its Younger Individuals’s Job Pressure need solutions.
“What number of instances have our juveniles’ DNA has been taken and not using a mum or dad consent, and not using a warrant or and not using a conviction?” stated AJ Flowers with the Younger Individuals’s Job Pressure. “Who has been complicit on this course of? Is that the county? Is that town? Is that a few of these applications our younger persons are going to that we’re considering are defending our younger of us, are y’all permitting younger individuals to get their DNA taken and not using a mum or dad consent or a warrant?”
WCCO spoke with Howie Padilla, public data officer for the Minneapolis Police Division.
“As soon as we heard of those considerations, we received on it immediately,” Padilla stated.
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MPD says it instantly started speaking to attorneys. Each MPD and UCMT says its relationship is important in repairing group police relations. For greater than 20 years, they’ve been working collectively to deal with considerations of biased policing in communities of colour.
“I might imagine there may be extra simply due to the openness of this one. They appear as if they thought it was not an issue, and as soon as we have been in a position to see the state statute we seen that it was an issue, so sure, I might undoubtedly imagine there’s extra.”
Padilla says he doesn’t imagine any legal guidelines have been damaged.
“The larger factor that I can inform you is that we’re appreciative that these considerations have been delivered to us from the group.”
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{The teenager}’s household and members of the group mediation group will maintain a press convention Friday morning to share extra particulars about what occurred.
Minneapolis, MN
Counterpoint | My response to the ‘Precarious State’ critics
Then there is the “not my problem” theme. “I live in the suburbs” or “greater Minnesota” so Minneapolis is not my problem. We saw this in Aaron Brown’s column, in which he did a “what about my issues” for greater Minnesota (“We do live in ‘A Precarious State,’ but place-baiting won’t solve that,” Oct. 8). Greater Minnesota has serious issues, too, and deserves a documentary just like the metro area, except there is only so much time in one documentary.
But most concerning is what former legislator Pat Garofalo called the “strategy of denial.” Brown’s column reflected this — how he strolled safely from the University of Minnesota’s Twin Cities campus to downtown Minneapolis. Eric Roper did a column for the Star Tribune (“Doomsday docs aside, Mpls.’ lush urbanity makes it a special place”) that literally talked about walking down a passageway of sunflowers in Minneapolis. With a picture of sunflowers and sunshine. He said:
“I’ll be biking up a protected bike lane and whiz past charming homes near quaint clusters of small businesses. I’ll be running around the lake and see sailboats framed beneath the downtown skyline. I’ll be at the annual alley dance party with my neighbors, a little toasted.”
The message was clear. Minneapolis has “lush urbanity,” not the crime and decline shown in the documentary. Well, only if you read through the literal picture of sunshine and flowers, then the picture of beautiful, well-maintained homes, then past the picture of happy people at a street festival, then pictures of joyous people wandering around downtown on a warm Saturday night, and then past the people lounging by the river did you get to the picture of drug dealers, people passed out on the street, trash, filth and garbage right on his protected bike lane. My friend in the Phillips neighborhood understood the real message – what is happening in your part of the city doesn’t matter because it isn’t what I experience. This was mirrored by many commenters from Minneapolis.
You see the same strategy of denial from columnist Evan Ramstad in the Star Tribune (“Crime isn’t our biggest problem,” Oct. 17). First, Ramstad brings up the question of who funded the documentary. Then he notes it has gone viral in business and right-leaning circles. Apparently he thinks moderates and the left are not watching it, which is depressing if true, because the issues in the documentary are real.
Crime is the one issue Ramstad talks about. He states:
Minneapolis, MN
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem to discuss ICE operations today in Minneapolis
ST. PAUL — Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is scheduled to visit Minneapolis on Friday, Oct. 24.
Noem, the former governor of South Dakota, is set to “discuss ICE operations and update on the Trump Administration’s immigration enforcement operations in the Twin Cities,” at the Bishop Henry Whipple Building in Minneapolis, according to a media advisory from DHS.
At least one group,
“50501,” has planned to protest
outside the event on Friday afternoon.
The visit comes three weeks after the
Justice Department sued Minnesota
over its “sanctuary policies.” Gov. Tim Walz
has rejected that
Minnesota is a sanctuary state, while Twin Cities Mayors
stand behind their separation ordinances.
Minneapolis, MN
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