Small business owners say they’re pressured to hire off-duty MPD cops for security - Minnesota Reformer

  • @[email protected]
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    429 months ago

    Wow. This is unbelievably rotten.

    She started out paying the officers $40 to $45 an hour, always more than one officer per night. And they didn’t just work one or two hours; they charged a minimum of four hours no matter how many they actually worked, she said. The pay gradually increased to nearly $60 an hour.

    The officer rates have skyrocketed, he said. He pays officers $150 to $160 an hour, and a “scheduler” also charges $15 to $20.

    Awad said MPD later told him he’d have to pay off-duty officers $145 an hour to provide security.

    Those officers are paid $107 an hour, but payroll is handled by the city.

    Minneapolis police officers start out making about $73,000 annually, but many are working mega overtime hours due to short staffing, pushing their salaries sky-high; 70% of officers made six figures last year.

    Prosecutors said Chauvin failed to pay taxes on $95,920 he earned doing security for El Nuevo Rodeo between 2014 and 2019. In addition to EME Antro Bar, where prosecutors said Chauvin was paid $250 cash for 3.5 hours, he also worked off-duty shifts at Cub Foods and Midtown Global Market.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      You’re right, but the parts you’ve picked are misleading. Minimums are normal for a lot of gig work.

      Those officers are paid $107 an hour, but payroll is handled by the city.

      This is in reference to the “buyback” program, where neighborhoods or organizations can pay for extra on-duty patrols. The off-duty private security payroll isn’t handled by the city.

      The bigger issues that stood out to me:

      MPD officers would usually sit in their squad cars, fully uniformed

      Gordon said running a business using city resources — uniforms, guns, squad cars — without city management, should be considered a violation of the city ethics code, even though the city explicitly allows it, even paying insurance for off-duty work.

      I don’t have a problem with any public official doing any kind of side work, as long as it doesn’t affect their job, and they aren’t using government resources to do it. Every job I’ve had has said you can moonlight, but you can’t use company resources or use the company name to imply any kind of endorsement. But clearly that’s not what’s happening here. This is absolutely a protection racket.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        You’re right, but the parts you’ve picked are misleading. Minimums are normal for a lot of gig work.

        I was primarily marveling how high the pay rates were, and that business owners essentially have to pay the cops whatever they want. The minimums don’t seem particularly outrageous given that the cops reportedly don’t really do anything when they are there.

      • Maeve
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        89 months ago

        Yep. Upon reading the title, my first thought was, “Nice business you have here. Be a shame if anything happened to it.”

        • @[email protected]
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          28 months ago

          The only difference is “It would be a shame if we didn’t show up when something happens.”

          • Maeve
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            18 months ago

            I agree but it’s already that they don’t.

    • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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      8 months ago

      The joys of defunding the police coupled with requiring minimum amounts of security for highly vulnerable businesses. This ‘Small business owner’ nightclub with over $1,000,000 in startup the article is in reference to lol. The writer is very measured and chooses their words carefully for a reason though. It’s a decent writeup regarding the issue.

      Here’s how the off-duty work program works: Some businesses — like large nightclubs — are required by the city to have security, which until 2020, sometimes had to be off-duty Minneapolis police officers.

      In 2020, the Minneapolis City Council stopped requiring off-duty officers at licensed events, and let them hire private security instead. In August 2020, Velazquez told the City Council only four businesses were being required to hire off-duty MPD officers. But some businesses were voluntarily hiring them because they were under the impression they had no choice, he said. Others thought if they hired police officers they would get “some level of preferential treatment,” he said.

  • @[email protected]
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    229 months ago

    hey, you got a nice place here. Nice family business. It would be awful if something were to happen to it. Maybe we could swing by and checkup on it from time to time to be sure it’s safe. Can you really put a price on your safety? Think about your kids.

  • @[email protected]
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    219 months ago

    Eventually, another officer helped schedule off-duty work: Derek Chauvin. He worked security at her club for 17 years.

    She sold the club in 2019. When Santamaria saw Chauvin pinning George Floyd on the pavement in the video that shocked the world, she recognized both, because Floyd worked as a bouncer inside the club in 2019.

    El Nuevo Rodeo burned to the ground during the subsequent riots.

    Santamaria’s allegations about MPD off-duty work are echoed by the experiences of other business owners, documented in government reports and even remarked upon by the city’s new police chief, Brian O’Hara. He said the system is “ripe for corruption,” citing a federal investigation in Jersey City, where a dozen cops were arrested due to widespread corruption of off-duty work.

    hmmm

  • TWeaK
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    99 months ago

    This is America, and regardless she absolutely has grounds to sue each and every one of them.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    This is a thing in my town, too, at night for the bars in the more visited “touristy” area. I don’t love it but I think the local police have a shortage and there were some issues.