Cincinnati clergy see change in hearts and minds but not policy since George Floyd s death Not what has changed but who has changed
One year since the death of George Floyd, faith leaders in Cincinnati havenât seen the policy or funding changes they hoped for, but they have seen a change in hearts and minds.
and last updated 2021-05-25 18:04:02-04
CINCINNATI â One year since the death of George Floyd, faith leaders in Cincinnati havenât seen the policy or funding changes they hoped for, but they have seen a change in hearts and minds. I think that the bigger question is not what has changed but who has changed,â said Lesley E. Jones, senior pastor at Truth and Destiny United Church of Christ. âAnd I think that that is paramount to all of this. While we have wanted policy and structural change, and I do believe that those changes are coming, I think that what had to happen was that people had to change - the hearts, the minds, ideals of people.
The Bloomington-Normal branch of the NAACP hosted a virtual remembrance event Tuesday to mark the anniversary of George Floyd’s death at the hands of the police.
PRONE investigation has found plenty of other deaths that deserve additional scrutiny.
Two cities – Denver and Minneapolis – have decided not to wait for potential legislation on prolonged prone restraint. After the first part of
PRONE aired in both cities, the two police departments elected to change the way they train their officers.
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NTERACTIVE GRAPHIC: It’s difficult to watch officers continue to make the same mistake
The warning arrived in the email inboxes of all badged members of the Denver Sheriff Department on Nov. 2, 2015.
“Once a subject has been restrained, immediately place him/her into a recovery position (lying on his/her side or seated upright,” the training bulletin said.