Anonymous ID: 7be818 May 28, 2020, 11:41 p.m. No.9357653   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7672 >>7673 >>7692 >>7716 >>7731 >>7774 >>7793 >>7997 >>8226

>>9357518

 

he is age 38

 

planted in MN?

Frey grew up in

Oakton, Virginia, a Washington, D.C., suburb,

 

and received a track scholarship to attend the College of William & Mary, from which he graduated in 2004. His family is Jewish and of Ukrainian descent.[6] After graduating with a degree in government, Frey received a contract from a shoe company to run professionally and competed for Team USA in the 2007 Pan American Games marathon, finishing in fourth place.[7] During that time, he earned a J.D. degree from Villanova University, graduating cum laude in 2009.[8]

 

Minneapolis City Council

Frey ran in the 2013 Minneapolis City Council election to represent Ward 3. He received the DFL endorsement, as well as

endorsements from over 40 elected officials and organizations

 

.[12] Frey's platform promised better constituent services,[12] to spur residential development,[12] increase the number and variety of small and local businesses, and push for full funding of affordable housing and address climate change. He defeated incumbent Diane Hofstede with over 60% of the vote and took office on January 2, 2014.

 

Frey moved to Minneapolis in 2009 after graduating from Villanova Law School,[9] and joined law firm Faegre & Benson (now Faegre Baker Daniels) before moving to law firm Halunen & Associates.[8][10]

 

Frey has been active in

community organizing

since moving to Minneapolis. After a tornado struck North Minneapolis in 2011, Frey provided legal services to tenants who lost their homes. In 2012,

before running for elected office, Frey

founded and organized the first Big Gay Race

, a 5K charity race to raise money for Minnesotans United for All Families, a political group organizing for marriage equality.[11]

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Frey

Anonymous ID: 7be818 May 28, 2020, 11:42 p.m. No.9357672   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7676 >>7716 >>7997 >>8226

>>9357653

>>9357518

 

As chair of the council's Elections Committee, Frey led the effort to pass an ordinance requiring landlords to provide tenants with voter registration information. The ordinance has served as a national model, with cities like Seattle and St. Paul following suit. Frey also led the effort to expand

early voting access

in Minneapolis ahead of the 2016 election, increasing the number of early voting sites in Minneapolis from one to five.[19

Anonymous ID: 7be818 May 28, 2020, 11:44 p.m. No.9357692   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7696 >>7716 >>7997 >>8226

>>9357653

Jacob Frey married his first wife, Michelle Lilienthal, in 2010.[30][31] They divorced in early 2014.[32]

 

Frey met his second wife, Sarah Clarke, through community organizing in Minneapolis. The couple married in July 2016. Clarke is a lobbyist for Hylden Advocacy & Law, where she represents several business, non-profit, and community organizations at the Minnesota legislature and executive branch agencies.[33] As of March 2020, they are expecting a child, due in September.[34]

 

He is a Reform Jew and attends two Reform synagogues in Minneapolis—Temple Israel and Shir Tikvah—together with his wife, who recently converted to Judaism

Anonymous ID: 7be818 May 28, 2020, 11:56 p.m. No.9357774   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7793 >>7997 >>8226

>>9357653

THERE MUST BE BETTER BODY CAM FOOTAGE

push to have it released

from

MinneapolisApril 4, 2018 2:30 p.m.

 

The Mayor of Mpls. mayor touts 'stronger, clearer, more precise' body cam polic

 

Mayor Jacob Frey announces updated body cam policy from North Minneapolis

 

Updated: 5:45 p.m. | Posted: 9:03 a.m.

Effective immediately Minneapolis police officers will have to keep their body cameras powered on throughout their entire shifts, and officers will have to start recording videos at least two city blocks before they arrive at their call destinations.

 

These and other provisions are part of an updated body camera policy announced Wednesday by Minneapolis city officials.

 

Mayor Jacob Frey said the new policy makes it clear when officers are required to use their cameras and lists the possible consequences for officers who don't follow the guidelines.

 

"For the first time, we're giving the body camera policy teeth — by providing the first, clear disciplinary structure for instances when this policy is violated," said Frey. "This is a stronger, clearer and more precise policy."

 

Under the updated policy, officers who turn off or don't activate their body cameras during use of force incidents may face 40-hour suspension or termination.

 

Imani Jaafar, director of the city's Office of Police Conduct Review, said officers who fail to properly use their cameras have typically been coached by supervisors instead of being disciplined. That was due in part because officers previously had more discretion on when to turn cameras on and off.

 

"This [new policy] both narrows the discretion and makes the disciplinary consequence clear," said Jaafar. "Now when a case comes forward without body camera activation it would go straight into the highest level of investigation … because of the level of severity."

 

2017 report:Should the police control their own body camera footage?

The chief touted the policy changes as making significant headway toward his goal of increasing transparency and public trust in the department. Arradondo said community members have demanded that officers start wearing cameras and he says this policy will make sure the cameras are useful.

 

"(The camera) tells a story," said Arradondo. "It's not the complete story, but it tells an important story. Our communities expect that. So it's a helpful tool. We have to ensure (officers) are using it properly."

 

Arradondo said in the coming months the department will unveil an online resource to allow the public to check on how often police are using body cameras.

 

However, some say the policy changes don't go far enough.

 

Michelle Gross of Communities United Against Police Brutality says she's deeply disappointed.

 

"There's nothing in this new policy that states that from this point forward, these will be the new disciplines," said Gross.

 

She fears that an officer fired under the new policy will take their dispute to an arbitrator who will reverse the termination.

 

"The arbitrator will be able to come back and say, well you never disciplined this before and you can't terminate them now," she said.

 

Officers welcome the new policy, said Minneapolis police union president Bob Kroll, who said it's much more clear than the earlier policies.

 

The updated policy is the second major revamp since then police officer Mohamed Noor shot and killed Justine Ruszczyk last summer.

 

At the time Noor was wearing a camera but didn't activate it in time to capture the incident. Now a former officer, Noor is facing murder and manslaughter charges.

 

Image:

Minneapolis Police Department's 1st precinct held a showing of the body cameras being used and charging on a wall

Anonymous ID: 7be818 May 28, 2020, 11:59 p.m. No.9357793   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7997 >>8226

>>9357774

>>9357653

 

Jacob Frey

 

The Mayor of Mpls. mayor touts 'stronger, clearer, more precise' body cam policy

 

MinneapolisApril 4, 2018

 

https://www.mprnews.org/story/2018/04/04/minneapolis-to-announce-changes-to-body-camera-rules

 

THERE MUST BE BETTER BODY CAM FOOTAGE

 

push to have it released

 

from

 

MinneapolisApril 4, 2018