
Allegations that Minneapolis police spied on Black organizations can't be substantiated, prosecutor says
CNN
Explosive allegations that Minneapolis police used covert social media accounts to spy on Black organizations and elected officials can't be substantiated by prosecutors, the deputy city attorney said in a letter Friday.
Erik Nilsson wrote to Mayor Jacob Frey and other city leaders that a review of thousands of social media documents failed to uncover "any material proving that MPD systematically targeted covert social media to target Black leaders, Black organizations, and elected officials without a public safety objective."
The Minnesota Department of Human Rights made the allegation last month as part of a larger report commissioned after the Memorial Day 2020 murder of George Floyd at the hands of a police officer. The human rights agency at the time accused the MPD of engaging in a "pattern or practice of race discrimination."

A number of Jeffrey Epstein survivors voiced their concern in a private meeting with female Democratic lawmakers earlier this week about the intermittent disclosure of Epstein-related documents and photos by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee, sharing that the selective publication of materials was distressing, four sources familiar with the call told CNN.












