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Minneapolis Police Federation vs.
Ralph Remington—we all lose
BY DWIGHT HOBBES
More and more, there’s reason to believe
the Minneapolis Police Federation won’t join the civilized
world without federal intervention.
Start with the Police Community Relations Council,
a glaring fiasco, brought into being because the U.S. Department
of Justice, over recent decades, saw enough red flags to step in
and keep an eye on things. Follow an evident scheme of things through
to the Ralph Remington controversy. It’s staring everyone
right in the face: the MPD is hostile toward communities and people
of color and has every intention of remaining so.
That’s why this business with Remington,
shocking as it is, didn’t come as much of a surprise. In late
October, Remington was the lone City Council member who objected
to the official installment of interim police chief Tim Dolan as
top cop. He already had made noises criticizing the city’s
failure to strengthen the Civilian Review Authority (CRA) and actually
make cops accountable for their misconduct. So, he already knew
he was not going to be on the MPD brass’ Christmas card list.
Around mid-November, in an effort to put bread
on the water, Remington invited police union president Sgt. John
Delmonico to sit down over lunch at Mimi’s, a South Minneapolis
restaurant, and see if they couldn’t work out enough differences
to have a less antagonistic relationship. Didn’t turn out
that way.
Delmonico showed up with Police Federation Board members Lt. Bob
Kroll, Officer Dan Ungurian and Officer Lyall Delaney in tow and,
according to Remington, ambushed, browbeat and physically threatened
him. “We were sitting at a table,” he recalls. “I
was on one side and they were all around me. [At one point] Lyall
Delaney leans across the table and says, ‘If you don’t
do what we tell you to do, we will remove you.’ The threat
was clear that he didn’t mean politically. I said, ‘What
is that supposed to mean?’ Then, he looked at me, like, basically,
‘You know what that means.’ Then Delmonico nudged him.
[Delaney] then said, ‘We won’t endorse you.’ But,
that’s not what he meant. They were physically threatening
me. Absolutely.”
Of course, to hear Delmonico tell it—as
he has in the Star Tribune, while refusing to return Pulse’s
phone calls—nothing of the kind took place.
Without getting into whether you believe Remington or Delmonico,
the problem is the mere fact that the Police Federation should have
enough demonstrated integrity to make Remington’s allegations
laughable. Instead, they are wholly plausible.
Michelle Gross, who spearheads the watchdog
organization, Communities United Against Police Brutality, comments,
“There is no doubt that there’s a demonstrated history
of racist intimidation and other forms of intimidation from the
Federation and from the police department against City Council members
and other city officials. In particular, the attacks that happened
on Natalie Johnson Lee back a few years ago. It was racist and sexist.
It’s outlandish that, fast forward a few years later, and
here we have it going on again.” Gross adds, “We have
seen this for a long time. The police federation inserts itself
into just about anything involving police accountability. They were
at the table during the CRA re-design. They keep inserting themselves
in places where it’s not proper for them to be. They have
an inordinate amount of power. The proper role for a federation
is to advocate for their constituency. Not to try and intimidate
our city officials into not holding police officers accountable.”
Mahmoud El-Kati, a scholar and longtime observer
of the Minneapolis police behavior, reflects that this run-in between
Remington and the Federation is hardly uncommon. “I don’t
find it uncharacteristic at all,” he says. “Remington
has a great deal of courage to go against the grain and for that
I salute him. It’s obvious he has made himself a target and
they’re not going to leave him alone.” El-Kati also
believes police supporters on the Council will throw their weight
in against Remington. “There are those among his colleagues
who will probably find ways to make it messy for him.”
Asked why he’s so convinced, he answers,
“That’s the pattern. That’s the way the script
is. Anytime a person, particularly from the [African American] community
stands up for what he thinks, there is a price to pay. There is
nothing unusual or exceptional about the police behavior [in this
instance]. You don’t have to [say] anything in some cases
to raise their hostility. So, what do you think if someone actually
does something to bring attention to themselves. And Ralph Remington
has done that. By expressing himself in a supposedly free society.”
As for how things stand now, Sgt. Delmonico and the others who were
there that day at Mimi’s, Remington notes, “We haven’t
had any [further] contact. I spoke with Chief Dolan about it and
Council president [Barb] Johnson the day before Thanksgiving. And
we’re all going to sit down, me, Dolan, Barb Johnson and Delmonico.
And then try to iron our differences out. The only thing I have
sought out of this situation by bringing it public is to put some
layer of protection between me and physical threat. I felt that
if I could shine a bright enough light on it, it would be much less
likely for anybody to aggress against me. That if some harm did
come to me or my family, everybody would know where it came from.”
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