Frey announces new search warrant policy in Minneapolis

mayor speaks at a podium
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey speaks at a press conference on Feb. 2 following the police killing of Amir Locke during a warrant raid.
Screenshot via livestream file

Updated: 4:30 p.m.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey rolled out his proposal for a new policy for serving search warrants in the city on Monday in the wake of the shooting death of Amir Locke during a warrant raid in February.

It bans no-knock warrants in all but the most extreme circumstances.

Under the new rules, police would have to wait 20 seconds before entering during the daytime and 30 seconds for nighttime searches. Searches would be classified by their relative risk. The plan also includes regular civilian review of search video and public disclosure of warrant data.

“There is the safer entry tactics, which would include the enhanced technology that we would be using, and then there's the civilian review, internally at the MPD, as well as the additional accountability practices,” the mayor said.

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Frey said eventually a formal written policy will outline training and new entry practices.

DeRay McKesson, with a police reform group, Campaign Zero, hailed the changes.

“What is powerful about this proposed policy is that every search warrant will require a waiting time,” McKesson said as he joined Frey on Monday. “There is no other city where every search warrant requires a waiting time. There are two states that have a 20-second waiting time. That's Maryland and Maine. There is not state or city that has 30 seconds.”

Frey said the policy will go through a full legal vetting and retraining of police before taking effect.

A group of Minneapolis residents inside the City Hall.
Community members chant at the Minneapolis City Hall as they wait to submit more than 1,200 formal complaints against Mayor Jacob Frey for his handling of the case of Amir Locke’s death last month. Locke, a 22-year-old Black man, was shot and killed at a friend’s house by a Minneapolis police SWAT team during the execution of a no-knock warrant on Feb. 2.
Tim Evans for MPR News file