Justice Dept. ready to sue Ferguson police over discrimination – report

Reuters/Brendan McDermid

Reuters/Brendan McDermid

The Justice Department is planning to file a lawsuit against the Ferguson Police Department in Missouri if it does not agree to change policing tactics that are unfairly targeting minorities, CNN reports.

Citing unnamed sources,
the network stated that the department’s investigation
into the Ferguson police force is expected to detail “a
pattern of discriminatory tactics.”
The ensuing report is
said to feature allegations made by low-income residents that
claim officers seek out minorities for minor traffic violations
only to put them in jail when they cannot afford to pay the
associated fines.

The behavior of Ferguson police has been placed under a
microscope ever since Officer Darren Wilson shot and killed
unarmed black teenager Michael Brown in August 2014. The shooting
sparked weeks of protests against what many believed was an
example of police brutality. A grand jury declined to indict
Wilson on criminal charges, setting off another wave of protests.

The Justice Department is running two separate investigations
related to Ferguson. One involves whether or not Wilson violated
Brown’s civil rights during the confrontation. Due to the
difficulty of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that a “willful”
violation occurred, the department is not expected to file civil
rights charges.

However, it is more likely to call for changes to the force
through its larger investigation of Ferguson police practices.
The agency has done so before in places such as Albuquerque, New
Mexico, where broad reforms were mandated after a lengthy
federal review into excessive force allegations.

Attorney General Eric Holder said earlier this week that he is
planning to reveal the department’s findings soon, before he
leaves office.

“I think everybody will see when we announce our results that
the process that we have engaged in is, as I said back at the
time when I went to Ferguson, independent, thorough, and based on
all the facts,”
he said. “And I am confident that people
will be satisfied with the results that will be announced.”

Law enforcement and government officials in Ferguson have been
skeptical of the investigation, though. Ferguson Mayor James
Knowles III even called the probe “extremely political.”

“We’re always looking to make positive improvements in our
police department,”
he said to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “If there is a
legitimate issue, we want to address that, but right now I don’t
really have any idea what that is in eyes of the DOJ.”

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