St. Paul City Attorney's Office to dismiss cases involving peaceful protesters during unrest

Protesters march peacefully in St. Paul following the death of George Floyd. (FOX 9)

The St. Paul City Attorney's Office has been reviewing nearly 100 cases connected to the civil unrest following the death of George Floyd. While peaceful protests occured at the Capitol and outside the Governor's Residence, riots broke out along University Avenue causing damage to multiple businesses.

During a press conference Friday, City Attorney Lyndsey Olson explained the majority of the cases involve peaceful demonstrators, like those arrested for simple curfew violations. She announced the cases that did not involve violence or threats will be dismissed. 

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St. Paul leaders plan to resolve cases of people arrested during peaceful protests

St. Paul's mayor and city attorney vowed Friday to dismiss cases against people who protested peacefully during unrest last week.

"For those individuals whose conduct goes beyond peaceful protest, the City Attorney’s Office may offer alternatives to traditional prosecution including ETHOS, our program which uses restorative justice principles to engage with first time and nonviolent offenders," said Olson.

Charging decisions will be made on a case-by-case basis and will proceed with traditional prosecution as necessary. 

Mayor Melvin Carter condemned the destruction and called for those involved to instead focus on bringing down barriers in the way of social justice.

"We’re asking out community members to double down with us to take that energy, to take that impatience to take that frustration and channel it into destroying not our community, not our community businesses and our assets and institutions, but into destroying all of those barriers written in law, written in policy, written in legal precedent, police union contracts all those barriers that make it difficult to hold someone accountable," said Carter.