Janeé
Harteau
@ChiefHarteau
A disgrace
to the badge! This is the battle that
myself and others have been fighting against.
Bob Kroll turn in your badge!
|
Anger as local police union chief calls George
Floyd a 'violent criminal'
Lt Bob Kroll says protests organised by ‘terrorist
movement’
Ex-Minneapolis police chief calls Kroll ‘a disgrace to
the badge’
Chris
McGreal in Minneapolis
Published
onMon 1 Jun 2020 19.49 BST
The
president of the Minneapolis police union has written to its members calling
George Floyd a “violent criminal”, describing those protesting over his death
as terrorists and criticizing the city’s political leadership for not
authorizing greater use of force to stop the rioting.
The letter
drew a swift rebuke from a former Minneapolis police chief who called it a
disgrace.
Lt Bob
Kroll, president of the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis, defended the
four officers involved in Floyd’s death, including Derek Chauvin, who kneeled
on Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes in the lead-up to his death on 25
May. Chauvin is facing murder and manslaughter charges, and the three other
officers have been fired.
“What is
not being told is the violent criminal history of George Floyd. The media will
not air this. I’ve worked with the four defense attorneys that are representing
each of our four terminated individuals under criminal investigation, in
addition with our labor attorneys to fight for their jobs. They were terminated
without due process,” wrote Kroll, according to a copy of the letter obtained
by the Star Tribune.
Floyd had
served time in prison for aggravated robbery but Chauvin could not have known
that when he detained him. Video footage shows that Floyd was not behaving in a
violent manner during his arrest, was not armed, and was not suspected of a
violent crime.
Following
Governor Tim Walz’s characterisation of the protests as led by outside
agitators, Kroll described the demonstrators as organised extremists.
“This
terrorist movement that is currently occurring was a long time build up which
dates back years,” he said.
At the
weekend, Walz claimed that 80% of those arrested during the protests were from
out of state and implied they were an organised movement intent on disrupting
governance. But arrest records show his claim was false. In fact, 80% were from
Minnesota and half of them were from Minneapolis.
While
groups of young white people dressed all in black were highly visible in
confrontations with the police, alongside young African Americans angered by
Floyd’s death, large numbers of the people involved in looting several miles of
Lake street in southern Missouri were evidently from the surrounding area.
Former
Minneapolis police chief Janeé Harteau swiftly condemned Kroll in a tweet, and
suggested that the letter reflected the attitudes that had blocked her efforts
at reform of the police department.
“A disgrace
to the badge! This is the battle that myself and others have been fighting
against. Bob Kroll turn in your badge!” wrote Harteau, who resigned from the
department in 2017 after a police shooting.
Kroll, who
has appeared at a campaign rally with Donald Trump and praised him as a
“wonderful president” for his support of the police, has long had run-ins with
politicians seeking to reform policing in Minneapolis.
In 2007,
Kroll called then congressman and now Minnesota attorney general, Keith Ellison
– who is Muslim and black – a terrorist because he pushed for reform of the
police.
In his
letter, Kroll said “heroic” police officers have been let down by political
leaders who failed to authorise the deployment of sufficient numbers of
officers on the streets to shut down the protests, and the destruction and
looting.
“What has
been very evident throughout this process is you have lacked support from the
top … Given the right numbers, the right equipment and your ability to use them
would have ended this Tuesday night,” he wrote. “I’ve noted in press
conferences from our mayor, our governor, and beyond, how they refuse to
acknowledge the work of the MPD (Minneapolis police department) and continually
shift blame to it. It is despicable behavior. How our command staff can
tolerate it and live with themselves I do not know.”
But Kroll
praised the city’s police officers.
“No one
with the exception of us is willing to recognize and acknowledge the extreme
bravery you have displayed through this riot. You have my utmost
respect,” he said.
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