Judge OKs deal between Ferguson, Justice Dept.


Associated Press

ST. LOUIS

A federal judge approved an agreement Tuesday between Ferguson and the U.S. Justice Department that calls for sweeping changes in the Missouri city where 18-year-old Michael Brown was fatally shot by a police officer.

U.S. District Judge Catherine Perry issued her ruling after a public hearing of several hours in St. Louis, where nearly three dozen people spoke, and many others had submitted written comments. Perry said the settlement is a “reasonable resolution” that avoids an extensive court battle.

“I think it’s in everyone’s best interest, and I think it’s in the interest of justice,” she said.

The settlement calls for diversity training for police; the purchase of software and the hiring of staff to analyze records on arrests, use of force and other police matters; outfitting all officers and jail workers with body cameras; the hiring of a team to monitor progress; significant municipal court reforms; and other changes.

Mayor James Knowles III said after the hearing that the city already has implemented many reforms, and will act swiftly on others to “move into compliance as soon as possible.” During the hearing, Knowles told Perry the agreement “is an important step in bringing this community together and moving us forward.”

Vanita Gupta, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, said in a statement that the agency looks forward to working with the city “as it implements the decree and continues the essential work to create a police department that the Constitution requires and that residents deserve.”

Ferguson has been under scrutiny since Brown, who was black and unarmed, was fatally shot by white police officer Darren Wilson in 2014. Brown’s death was a catalyst in the national Black Lives Matter movement. A grand jury and the Justice Department cleared Wilson, who resigned from the police force in November 2014, but the shooting led to a Justice Department investigation.

That inquiry found alarming patterns of racial bias in policing and a municipal court system that generated revenue largely on the backs of poor and minority residents. The Justice Department’s critical report in March 2015 prompted the resignations of Ferguson’s city manager, police chief and municipal judge. All three were white men who have since been replaced by black men.