Louisville and LMPD officials joined U.S. Department of Justice representatives to discuss a "civil rights announcement" ...
Louisville and LMPD officials joined U.S. Department of Justice representatives to discuss a "civil rights announcement" ...
An announcement is coming today from the U.S. Department of Justice. Here's what they found in their investigation ...
Consent decrees cost a city's taxpayers millions for oversight, but Louisville's agreement is "historic" and includes a cap ...
Louisville has signed a consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice.Mayor Craig Greenberg called the 242-page consent ...
Consent decrees were enacted in a 1994 law after Rodney King was beaten by officers with Los Angeles Police. With it, a U.S.
The agreement comes after the DOJ found police and Metro government for years engaged in practices that violated the U.S.
Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg, Interim Police Chief Paul Humphrey, and U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) Assistant Attorney ...
Mayor Greenberg provided an update, saying that “not a day goes by” that he and his team are not working with the U.S. DOJ to reach a consent decree.
Last March, the DOJ released a scathing report into the discriminatory patterns and practices of policing by the LMPD.
Louisville Metro Police are looking for people who may have been victimized by a man that they've arrested and accused of ...
The mayor’s office said the consent decree “will set an aggressive timeline for continued police reform and provide a ...