Minneapolis, MN
World Cup watch parties in Minneapolis, St. Paul
ST. PAUL, Minn. (FOX 9) – The 2022 FIFA World Cup is about to kick off on FOX on November 20. FOX Sports activities will air all 64 World Cup matches stay throughout FOX and FS1, with each match livestreaming on the FOX Sports activities App. Whereas video games may very well be watched at dwelling, we have put collectively a listing of locations within the Twin Cities the place followers can watch the US Males’s Nationwide Group and different groups play.
The way to watch the World Cup in Minnesota
Minnesota United World Cup watch events
The Minnesota United (MNUFC) can be internet hosting World Cup watch events at Allianz Subject in St. Paul, and FOX 9 can even have a streaming present at midday for every watch celebration.
Followers can go to Allianz Subject to cheer on the U.S. Males’s Nationwide Group as they start World Cup play in Qatar. Watch events are being hosted for all three of the USMNT’s group stage video games on the Brew Corridor at Allianz Subject, with doorways opening at 11:30 a.m. forward of the 1 p.m. kickoffs.
2022 WORLD CUP SCHEDULE: FULL LIST OF GROUPS AND MATCHES
The watch events can be held on the next days:
- Monday, November 21 for USA vs. Wales
- Friday, November 25 for USA vs. England
- Tuesday, November 29 for USA vs. Iran
Forward of 1 p.m. kickoff – at midday – FOX 9 will be a part of MNUFC on a livestreaming present to speak all issues soccer and preview the World Cup. You’ll be able to watch it streaming right here and on FOX 9’s YouTube channel.
The Minnesota United additionally plans to host watch events for the Spherical of 16, quarterfinal, semifinal and last matches.
Different World Cup watch events within the Twin Cities
Black Hart of St. Paul
The Black Hart, 1415 College Avenue West, will present each match of the 2022 World Cup, together with the 4 a.m. matches. The bar is promoting $15 World Cup Passports, which will get you reductions. Each recreation you watch on the bar earns you a stamp in your passport. On the finish of the match, you may submit your passport to win large prizes.
Brit’s Pub in Minneapolis
The favored Minneapolis bar at 1110 Nicollet Mall can be internet hosting watch events all through the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The bar can be promoting $10 tickets for “assured admission” for a number of the large video games, whereas different video games can be first-come, first-serve. Tickets are required for November 25 and November 29. Extra data and tickets right here.
La Doña Cervecería in Minneapolis
The Latinx brewery, 241 Fremont Avenue North, will host probably the most anticipated matches. And there is free WiFi so distant employees can benefit from the video games whereas protecting tabs on work. Here is the schedule.
Tom’s Watch Bar in Minneapolis
Positioned at 609 Hennepin Ave., the bar affords a 360-degree viewing expertise for all of the World Cup video games, with the bar calling itself World Soccer HQ in Minneapolis. Here is the schedule.
Utepils Brewing in Minneapolis
The brewery, 225 Thomas Ave. N, is extending its taproom hours to indicate “as many video games as attainable,” with complimentary snacks and beer specials. The taproom will open quarter-hour previous to the beginning of the 1 p.m. video games, and plans to open early for the 9 a.m. video games throughout the quarterfinals and finals. Here is the schedule.
Is your institution internet hosting a World Cup watch celebration? We’ll add it to the record. E mail melissa.turtinen@fox.com with particulars.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis, Justice Department reach police reform agreement. What is a consent decree?
Federal consent decrees explained
Explore how Louisville is partnering with the Department of Justice via a consent decree to enhance constitutional policing, public safety and community trust.
The city of Minneapolis has agreed to make systemic reforms to its police department after a federal investigation sparked by the 2020 murder of George Floyd found a pattern of civil rights violations including unjustified deadly force and discrimination.
The city, its police department and federal officials reached a court-enforceable agreement known as a consent decree, the Justice Department announced this week. The agreement aims to prevent excessive use of force and racially discriminatory policing and to protect the public’s First Amendment rights. An independent monitor will be appointed to assess whether the requirements of the decree are being met and report publicly on the city’s progress.
“Through this consent decree, the City and the Minneapolis Police Department have committed to instituting reforms that will make Minneapolis a model law enforcement agency that respects everyone’s civil and constitutional rights,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division.
The announcement in Minneapolis comes after the Justice Department reached a similar agreement in Louisville, Kentucky, where the 2020 police killing of Breonna Taylor sparked major protests. The Justice Department has been enforcing more than a dozen such agreements over the past four years after Attorney General Merrick Garland reversed a Trump administration policy limiting the use of consent decrees.
Here’s what to know about consent decrees:
What is a consent decree?
The 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act gave the civil rights division of the Justice Department the power to investigate systemic police misconduct. Of nearly 70 investigations conducted between 1994 and 2016, 20 resulted in the creation of court-enforced consent decrees, according to a 2017 report from the Justice Department.
These decrees are legal agreements requiring changes which are overseen by a federal court and an independent monitor. Conducting the investigations, negotiating the agreements and implementing reforms often take years to complete.
The Justice Department is currently enforcing 15 existing agreements and has opened 12 new investigations into law enforcement agencies since Biden’s term began.
Do consent decrees work?
Consent decrees have been credited with successfully improving some of the country’s 18,000 police departments. In October, the Justice Department and the city of Albuquerque sought to end certain portions of their consent decree after its independent monitor found the city and police department have fully complied with 99% of the consent decree’s terms.
In Ferguson, Missouri, which became an epicenter for police reform after mass protests following the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in 2014, there were major changes eight years later. Ferguson monitor Natashia Tidwell reportedly cited significant progress in officer training and community policing. The mostly all-white police department is more racially diverse. Traffic stops are less frequent and systems have been set up to hear resident complaints.
But some officials have criticized the court-enforced plans for being expensive, time-consuming and ineffective. Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, previously told USA TODAY consent decrees can exacerbate tension between police and the communities.
The union representing Louisville Metro Police officers filed a motion in federal court opposing the city’s recently signed consent decree, which has not yet been approved by U.S. District Court Judge Benjamin Beaton and enacted. The River City Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 614 argued the 242-page agreement alters working conditions of officers and has the potential to erode the union’s collective bargaining capabilities.
The city of Memphis told the U.S. Department of Justice in a letter last month it will not enter into a consent decree with the government following the completion of its pattern-or-practice investigation into the Memphis Police Department. The investigation was announced months after Tyre Nichols was fatally beaten by officers with the Memphis Police Department’s SCORPION Unit, though the DOJ said it did not start the investigation solely because of that incident.
“We believe there are better ways to reimagine policing that do not slow the process or cost the taxpayers millions of dollars,” the letter read.
What happens next in Minneapolis?
The consent decree in Minneapolis is pending court approval. If enacted, it will require officers to emphasize de-escalation techniques, limit pretextual stops and avoid handcuffing children under the age of 14. The department must also prioritize non-police response to calls involving behavioral health issues, thoroughly investigate complaints and hold officers accountable.
The agreement comes after a 92-page Justice Department report found Minneapolis police used excessive force, unlawfully discriminated against Black and Native American people, violated the rights of people engaged in speech protected by the First Amendment and discriminated against people with behavioral health disabilities.
The investigation was launched nearly a year after former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes. Floyd’s death sparked in May 2020 sparked nationwide protests against police brutality and systemic racism.
“Our commitment to securing a federal consent decree has never wavered – it has been a top priority of my administration, and we are ready to act,” said Mayor Jacob Frey.“This agreement reflects what our community has asked for and what we know is necessary: real accountability and meaningful change. I’m grateful to the Department of Justice for their partnership and urgency in helping us finalize this decree, ensuring we didn’t lose this critical opportunity to advance reforms and build on the important work already underway.”
Contributing: Reuters; Bart Jansen, Kelly Puente, and Terry Collins USA TODAY; Lucas Finton, Memphis Commercial Appeal; Josh Wood, Louisville Courier Journal
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis’ police consent decree brings hope, skepticism
MINNEAPOLIS — There are mixed feelings about a long-awaited agreement between Minneapolis and the federal government to bring reform to the city’s police department.
The city announced Monday it had agreed on a consent decree, or legal agreement, with the U.S. Department of Justice.
Some of the reforms outlined include changes to the use of force policy, limiting military-style tactics during protests, and banning handcuffing children under 14.
City leaders have said a key purpose of the consent decree is to rebuild the community’s trust in the police department.
KingDemetrius Pendleton, a Minneapolis photojournalist, says it will take more than legal documents and policy changes to do that.
“One of the biggest things is communication and listening to the people in the community,” he said. “If you want us to listen to you all [the police] and trust you all, you all have to be trustworthy. [MPD] can make a change, but it starts with being truthful.”
Pendleton also owns Listen 2 Us Studio, a community gallery near George Floyd Square that displays social justice-themed photography and art.
The consent decree process started after a police officer killed George Floyd in 2020, sparking global protests.
A Department of Justice report released in 2023 found that the Minneapolis Police Department engaged in systematic racial discrimination and unconstitutional policing for years.
Pastor Ian Bethel with the Unity Community Mediation Team worked with the DOJ on the consent decree and co-chairs the city’s Police Community Relations Council.
“I was so grateful and tearful today,” he said.
Bethel says real change will come through diligent community oversight.
“Compliance is the key,” he said. “The community’s going to do it, and the community’s given trust to us, because we’re tried and proven.”
The Minneapolis Police Department is also under a court-ordered agreement with the state of Minnesota, so some reforms are already underway.
A judge still has to approve the consent decree.
It’s unclear what will happen if President-elect Donald Trump takes office before then. He’s been critical of consent decrees in the past.
Minneapolis, MN
Biden admin and Minneapolis agree to police changes, questions loom over whether Trump will strike them down
The Biden administration secured an agreement to implement police reforms in Minneapolis ahead of President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.
The consent decree agreement Monday with the Minneapolis Police Department follows a similar decree that the department agreed upon with Louisville, Kentucky, police last month. The agreements follow the Biden administration’s initiation of 12 investigations in 2021, which probed possible “pattern or practice” of civil rights abuses by police departments around the country following the anti-police riots that took place after the death of George Floyd in 2020.
Both decrees await approval by the courts. The 171-page Minneapolis agreement would overhaul the city’s police training and use of-force-policies, while requiring officers to “promote the sanctity of human life as the highest priority in their activities.” The decree also mandates that officers must not allow race, gender or ethnicity “to influence any decision to use force, including the amount or type of force used.”
MINNEAPOLIS POLICE STAFFING LEVEL PLUMMETS TO HISTORIC 4-DECADE LOW 3 YEARS AFTER GEORGE FLOYD’S DEATH: REPORT
Other elements of the Minneapolis agreement include bolstering protections for protesters, new data collection requirements aimed at reducing racial discrimination, guidelines restricting officers from going after fleeing subjects, new interrogation requirements, a mandate against racial profiling in investigations, traffic stop reforms and more.
Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division was asked repeatedly during a Monday press conference from Minneapolis whether the Trump administration could derail the agreement.
“I can’t predict the future,” Clarke said. “What I can tell you is that the findings we identified in Minneapolis are severe. These are real issues that impact people’s lives. The community wants reform. The city wants reform, the police department wants reform, and the Justice Department stands here today as a full partner in the effort of achieving reform and transformation for this community.”
BIDEN DOJ OPPOSES COURT DECISION ALLOWING DEREK CHAUVIN CHANCE TO EXAMINE GEORGE FLOYD’S HEART
Meanwhile, in an email to constituents, Minneapolis City Council Member Robin Wonsley said she has no faith that the incoming Trump administration will be a “serious partner” in supporting the recently agreed-upon consent decree.
A similar consent decree agreed upon by the Biden administration and the Loisville police roughly three weeks ago also compels the department to revise its use-of-force policies, places new restrictions around traffic stops and police searches, and challenges how law enforcement deals with protesters.
A local police union in the city is challenging the reforms, calling on a judge not to approve the agreement. Meanwhile, the conservative Heritage Foundation has argued that the point of the consent decree coming so late in Biden’s term is “to bind the Trump 47 Administration and future elected Louisville administrations who may well vehemently and categorically disagree with the Proposed Consent Decree.”
Both Minneapolis and Louisville were flash points for debates around police reform after both cities saw the high-profile deaths of Floyd and Breonna Taylor in 2020. Both cities, and numerous others, saw protesters rampage through the streets following their deaths, leading to multiple fatalities and billions of dollars in damage that year.
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Fox News Digital reached out to the Justice Department for comment, but they declined to comment.
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