Minneapolis, MN
‘Seeds of Justice’ crop art exhibition at U.S. Courthouse in Minneapolis takes on the law
A portrait of former Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall includes mung beans.
A portrait of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor features dried red peppers for her red lips.
These two “seedy” portraits of famous judges are at the U.S. Courthouse in Minneapolis, but they’re nothing like the stark photographs of the president and vice president that hang near the entrance.
The eyes, noses, lips, skin tones and robes of these Supreme Court justices were painstakingly crafted using seeds, beans, grains, quinoa, sunflower seeds, flaxseed, lentils, dried peppers and more.
“The smallest seed I’ve ever used, which I wouldn’t do again, is thyme [which she used in her Marshall portrait],” said Laura Melnick, a crop artist and civil poverty lawyer. She eyed her portrait of Thurgood Marshall, a seed masterpiece. At the top she included a quote from Marshall: “We must dissent. … America has no choice but to do better.”
“The writing always takes me a really long time,” she said.
A new exhibition of 17 crop artworks, titled “Seeds of Justice,” explores social justice movements, the law and, of course, the playfulness of crop art. It debuted Thursday night at the U.S. Courthouse in Minneapolis.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis City Council to hear public comments on effort to repeal adult bathhouse ban
Minneapolis, MN
Search for permanent Minneapolis police chief has not started yet, commissioner says
Minneapolis leaders say police reform work is continuing as the city prepares to start its search for a new permanent police chief.
The city has said little publicly about the search for a new permanent Minneapolis Police Department (MPD) chief since Chief Brian O’Hara resigned more than two weeks ago.
Brian O’Hara resigns as Minneapolis police chief after report shows he interfered with investigation into his conduct
5 EYEWITNESS NEWS asked for an update alongside a new progress report on state-mandated reform efforts released on Thursday from city public safety leaders, including Community Safety Commissioner Todd Barnette and MPD Bureau Chief Ganesha Martin, who said they are confident reform work will not slow down after O’Hara’s resignation.
“Not at all,” said Martin. “So, Chief Peterson has been highly engaged, very open, curious, wanting to make sure to get up to speed on all the things that we’re doing.”
“The majority of the process is already in place, so I don’t think that it impacts the work that’s being done,” said Barnette.
What happens next?
Barnette also addressed whether ongoing mandated reforms could affect the city’s ability to hire a new chief. He said the work ahead is significant, but said he believes it will still draw interest.
“It’s a heavy lift, but having transformational reform that we’re institutionalizing here in the city is exciting work to do,” said Barnette. “So, I think we’re going to attract a lot of candidates. I don’t think that’s going to persuade anybody from not coming.”
Barnette said the hiring process is still in its early stages, adding that city leaders are still deciding what the search will look like.
“We’re still, we’re not even two weeks in with Chief Peterson yet,” said Barnette.
“We’re just going through, looking at what we did in the former search, what things that the mayor wants to see in this search, and then what input we’re going to get along the way,” said Barnette.
Has the search started?
When asked whether the official search had started, Barnette said no. He also said the city has not started talking to people yet.
The fourth quarterly progress report from independent monitor Effective Law Enforcement for All (ELEFA) also called the hiring of a new chief “an opportunity.” The report found “significant weaknesses” in the former chief’s review process for misconduct investigations.
Barnette said the city will begin the official search for a permanent chief “pretty soon.”
Below is a statement from Interim Chief Bill Peterson on the release of the fourth ELEFA report:
You can view the full ELEFA report below:
Minneapolis, MN
FOX 9 Good Day: June 15, 2026
A new survey shows which celebrity young people would most like to be. Plus, a Minnesota company is trying to make leasing hunting land easier. And we deep dive into why gas prices are vastly different even across town.
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