Public hearing set for repeal of Minneapolis’s Lurking Ordinance (5/20/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (651) 645-4097, support@aclu-mn.org
MINNEAPOLIS – A controversial city ordinance may soon be repealed
with the help of a number of organizations who claim that the law is used in a
manner that is discriminatory towards racial minorities and the homeless.
The Minneapolis Lurking Ordinance states "No person, in any public or private
place, shall lurk, lie in wait or be concealed with intent to commit any crime
or unlawful act." Council member Cam Gordon introduced a motion to repeal
the ordinance. He has been backed by the Coalition to Repeal the Lurking
Ordinance, comprised of dozens of local, state, and national groups who hope
that a repeal of the ordinance will be a step in the right direction towards
greater civil rights in the city. The date for the public hearing has been
set for May 21 at 1:00 p.m. during Minneapolis City Council's Public Safety and
Regulatory Service Committee meeting.
In an independent study of arrest data spanning from 2003 to 2007, the
American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota, a member of the Coalition, has
found that an African American is eight times more likely to be arrested for
lurking than a Caucasian, and a homeless person is twenty times more likely than
a non-homeless person to be arrested under the ordinance.
There are currently nearly thirty organizations that belong to the Coalition
to Repeal the Lurking Ordinance including: American Civil Liberties Union
of Minnesota, Right to Housing Committee, Jewish Community Action, Legal Rights
Center, Minneapolis Urban League, National Law Center on Homelessness and
Poverty, and St. Stephen's Human Services.
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