Minneapolis agrees to ban chokehold after Floyd death

Minneapolis agrees to ban chokehold after Floyd death

The Minneapolis Police Department may soon no longer be able to perform chokeholds and use neck restraints on suspects following the death of an unarmed black man who was pinned to the ground for nearly nine minutes, according to an agreement approved by the City Council Friday.

THE CITY COUNCIL APPROVED THE AGREEMENT

The agreement, struck between the city’s negotiators and the Minnesota Department of Human Rights and subject to approval from a judge, would also require police to halt and report any instances where fellow officers violate the policy to their superiors.

“Regardless of tenure or rank, any member of the City’s Police Department who observes another member of the City’s Police Department use any unauthorized use of force, including any choke hold or neck restraint, in violation of this Stipulation and Order, has an affirmative duty to immediately report the incident,” it says.

The agreement comes in response to the death of George Floyd, who died after fired Officer Derek Chauvin pinned his neck to the ground with his knee even after Floyd, who was in handcuffs, appeared in bystander video to lose consciousness.

In addition to the chokehold measures, the agreement seeks greater restrictions for police to use crowd-control weapons, and would bolster transparency in how police discipline is handled, according to the Star Tribune local newspaper, which posted a copy of the 10-page document.

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