Questions remain over ‘high risk’ search of Idd's family home
Go Deeper.
Create an account or log in to save stories.
Like this?
Thanks for liking this story! We have added it to a list of your favorite stories.
Community members continue to question why law enforcement authorities conducted a high-risk raid on the family home of a 23-year-old man shot and killed by police last week.
Family members have said sheriff’s deputies and state investigators entered their home with guns early Thursday, zip-tied the adults and didn’t tell them that their son, Dolal Idd, had been killed until after the search was over.
The raid was condemned during a protest march that included hundreds of people over the weekend, and by community groups including the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. Some say it showed a lack of concern for the children in the house, and others said the raid could have ended in tragedy.
“This type of treatment for a bereaved family is inhumane and unconscionable,” said newly elected state Sen. Omar Fateh, DFL-Minneapolis. “The police have lost the public trust, especially within BIPOC [Black, Indigenous and people of color] communities.”
Turn Up Your Support
MPR News helps you turn down the noise and build shared understanding. Turn up your support for this public resource and keep trusted journalism accessible to all.
After initial criticism, the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office released body-camera footage of the raid, which they participated in at the request of the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Sheriff Dave Hutchinson said that the raid was “high risk” because of the possibility that weapons were at the scene.
Video shows that officers, with guns drawn, banged on the front door and then streamed into the home, shouting, “Police! Search warrant!” and corralling the home’s residents in a living room.
Idd was shot and killed by Minneapolis police as police tried to catch him in an illegal gun sale on Wednesday evening, according to an application for a search warrant. The application also said that a criminal informant had told them that Idd kept other firearms at the home in Eden Prairie, Minn.
But the mere presence of a weapon doesn’t mean that the raid would be risky for officers, said professor David Harris, who studies police behavior at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.
“If you have people in the home who present some kind of risk, you can understand why police would do this,” Harris said. “But we would want to know as members of the public, well, what did they know or think that led them to think that these terrified people would be some risk to them?”
Hutchinson said in his only statement on the raid that he was proud of the “professionalism” his officers displayed during the raid, and that they conducted themselves “appropriately and respectfully.”
Police have a lot of options when deciding how to search or raid a home, Harris said. At a time when police behavior is under unprecedented scrutiny, law enforcement should share more information with the public about what motivated these actions, he said.
“It would be really great if, despite the difficult circumstances, police were able to communicate to the public why they had done what they had done instead of just saying, ‘We did the right thing,’” Harris said. “I don’t have the sense that what the sheriff had to say would really satisfy the public.”
Hutchinson and the sheriff’s office did not respond to questions from MPR News about the raid.