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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Mayor Craig Greenberg has announced Louisville has signed a consent decree agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) after more than nine months of negotiations.
Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg holds a copy of the city's consent decree agreement with the Department of Justice. | Dec. 12, 2024 The document said the monitor will submit a proposed budget ...
On Thursday, Louisville officials announced they've reached an agreement on a consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice. Here's a look at what that means.
LMPD’s consent decree was announced Dec. 12 after months of negotiations between the DOJ and city officials. Under the agreement, which Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg hailed as “historic ...
In that meeting, representatives from the DOJ outlined the next steps of Louisville's consent decree and provided details of how the agreement will help address specific issues found in its ...
STUDIO TO EXPLAIN EXACTLY WHAT THAT MEANS. RANDALL. OKAY, VICKI. SO A CONSENT DECREE IS JUST AN AGREEMENT. IN THIS CASE, IT’LL BE BETWEEN THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND LOUISVILLE METRO GOVERNMENT ...
Louisville police union taking city's agreement with DOJ on LMPD reforms to federal court. Dec 30, 2024 Dec 30, 2024 ... Louisville and the DOJ agreed to a consent decree.
The DOJ will call off its investigation into the Minneapolis and Louisville police departments over widespread misconduct, almost five years after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
The Justice Department issued a scathing report Wednesday on the Louisville Police Department after a nearly two-year review launched in the wake of the botched raid that killed Breonna Taylor.
LOUISVILLE, Ky -- A nearly two-year civil rights investigation into the Louisville, Kentucky, police department and Louisville Metro Government, touched off by the killing of Breonna Taylor, found ...
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