The St. Paul City Council plans to ask the state board that sets standards for officers and licenses them to “conduct a thorough investigation” of officers’ use of force during a recent federal immigration operation.
A resolution to be introduced at the council’s Wednesday afternoon meeting also says the council will conduct an analysis, including a public discussion, of the city’s ordinance adopted in 2004 “that establishes a clear line of separation between the actions of local law enforcement and those of federal immigration authorities.”
Finally, the council will direct the city’s Office of Financial Services to audit all St. Paul police costs for personnel, equipment and supplies during the Nov. 25 ICE action in Payne-Phalen, says the resolution, which is subject to change at the council meeting.
Community members: Officers used force on people protesting, observing
The council action is happening because community members reported they witnessed St. Paul officers “using force on residents who were exercising their First Amendment rights to observe and protest an action undertaken by federal agents from Homeland Security Investigations (“HSI”),” the resolution says.
On the morning of Nov. 25, federal deportation officers were conducting an operation in St. Paul to arrest an undocumented person who’d previously been removed from the United States and who had re-entered unlawfully, according to a probable cause statement signed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement deportation officer and filed with a criminal complaint in federal court.
ICE ultimately arrested two men in the 600 block of East Rose Avenue. One is charged in federal court with assaulting and impeding a federal officer by allegedly striking the officer’s vehicle with his own, and improper entry to the U.S. He has entered a plea of not guilty.
The St. Paul Police Department has said in a statement that they were called to assist when “the federal perimeter was broken by protesters. The street was compromised with foot and vehicle traffic, and a dangerous situation was unfolding.”
Police Chief Axel Henry said “reports came out that people were starting to arm themselves with rocks and sticks. … I asked additional officers to come to the scene to make the scene safe for both those who were there to protest those events and for the agents themselves.”
Plan to ask POST Board for investigation
Communities United Against Police Brutality says St. Paul officers violated department policies on police interactions during First Amendment-protected activities, to include protests, including by spraying people in the face with pepper spray when they were not violating the law and shooting pepper ball and other munitions “indiscriminately into the crowd.”
The city council resolution says they will work with the Board of Peace Officer Standards and Training “to conduct a thorough investigation into SPPD’s use of force.”
The POST Board’s website says they are “limited to addressing officer behavior that violates the standards of conduct for peace officers outlined” in Minnesota rules.
Police Chief Henry has said the department is conducting “a full review of the department’s response,” which includes “viewing hundreds of hours of body camera footage, as well as footage being shared by community members.”
Council plans analysis of separation ordinance
The council resolution says the events of Nov. 25 “have created public doubt surrounding the integrity of the city’s separation ordinance and the conduct of SPPD officers.”
That’s prompting the council to say it will conduct an analysis of the city’s separation ordinance “and other legal limitations on city law enforcement as well as on the operations of federal immigration enforcement officers acting within the city of St. Paul.”
The council plans to vote on the resolution Wednesday afternoon. The actions in the resolution will “be initiated immediately following its adoption,” the resolution says.
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