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. The agreement comes a ...
The consent decree between Louisville Metro Government and the U.S. Department of Justice still needs approval from a federal ...
With a 242-page document in hand and police and federal officials at his side, Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg announced Thursday that Louisville Metro Police and the city's government reached an ...
Consent decrees are legally binding agreements and will ... DOJ Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Kristen Clarke said Louisville's community will continue to play an integral role ...
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. A consent decree is a legal ...
THE AGREEMENT COMES AFTER THE DEPARTMENT OF ... Watch the full announcement below: Louisville and the DOJ have been working on the consent decree since February. This came after the DOJ released ...
The Justice Department announced an agreement Thursday with the city of Louisville on a federal oversight plan that will require the local police department to make sweeping changes aimed at ...
Union leaders argue the consent decree violates the collective bargaining agreement between the FOP and Metro government.
Greenberg, Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke and Louisville Metro Police Chief Paul Humphrey announced the agreement Thursday at Metro Hall. The mayor hailed it as a "historic" pact that ...
The legally agreement between Metro Government and the U.S. Department of Justice, finalized in December, is being challenged in federal court by the River City FOP.
The River City Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 614 filed a motion Friday to intervene in the consent decree case between the DOJ and Louisville Metro, arguing the 242-page agreement alters working ...