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Hire outside investigators, appoint/deputize independent lawyers to be special prosecutors, etc.

Most states of cities with police problems have very strong civil rights laws (often stronger than federal protections) -- they have the legal tools to make real change happen.

They don't need the DOJ to fix their problems. Relying on the DOJ makes sense if the local government is supportive of the bad policing -- like back in the civil rights/segregation era. Some states would not comply so the feds had to make things happen. You don't have that situation today.



> Hire outside investigators, appoint/deputize independent lawyers to be special prosecutors, etc.

And if it's a systemic problem in the local government, both the choices of the “independent” investigators and the shopping of their remit, and the decision of whether to do it at all will be affected by the systemic problem.

> Most states of cities with police problems have very strong civil rights laws (often stronger than federal protections.

Which helps not at all when the people and institutions responsible for enforcing the law are part of the problem.


Again, the problem is that localities with systemic police problems almost by definition lack the will to investigate and fix those problems.


It looks like the Minneapolis City Council is up for election next year? (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minneapolis_City_Council)

If everyone hasn't forgotten all about this by that time, you could make police reform a major election issue. And then hold them to it.

But, odds are, everyone will have forgotten by then.


Vote those people out then. I know it is easier said than done, but I don't hear too many calling for the mayor of Minneapolis or city council members to be recalled.

Someone in the staff advocated for the current police contract, why not start by firing them?

Or maybe the problem is not as important to local progressive governments as it is being to made out to be?




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