The Trump administration moved on Wednesday to scrap proposed agreements for federal oversight of police departments in Minneapolis and Louisville, as part of a broader abandonment of efforts by previous administrations to overhaul local law enforcement across the United States.
Justice Department officials said they planned to drop cases filed after incidents of police violence against Black people in Minneapolis and Louisville, Ky., and to close investigations into departments in Phoenix, Ariz., Trenton, N.J., Memphis, Tenn., Mount Vernon, N.Y., Oklahoma City, as well as the Louisiana State Police.
In those cities, Justice Department officials said, they were retracting Biden-era findings that police departments had violated the constitutional rights of residents, declaring those findings to be misguided.
The announcement came four days before the fifth anniversary of the murder of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man who died at the hands of the Minneapolis police. That act of violence, caught on video, inspired national outrage and worldwide protests against police violence targeting Black Americans.