creating environments that unsafe for the lgbtq community. leaders, their governors, are at the head of that. ensuring that it is not safe for lgbtq communities in that state. what we are seeing here is, even if the bills don t pass, we project about ten to 20% of these bills will pass. we are seeing them pass. there are ten don t say gay bills that have passed across ten different states in this country. the harm is done as soon as there proposed. they are proposing this insidious around the lgbtq community that we need to be legislated against as human beings. i beg any of these politicians to show me what happened. what went wrong that you needed to legislate against lgbtq people. i can answer that for. you absolutely nothing! these are solutions to problems that don t exist. they are causing great problems for our community. glad president, sarah kay ellis. often glad to give you the chance to chat and talk about this. for all of you that is gonna do for me on this edit
cursor standing by in minneapolis for us. chesley can you tell us what is in this report in the doj? what did the attorney general have to say about the minneapolis police department conduct? yasmin, i want to point to align specifically from the conclusion of this doj report which summarizes a lot of this. it says the minneapolis police department, quote, uses unreasonable force, infringes on first amendment rights, and discriminates based on race and disability. talking about people with behavioral issues being discriminated against. black people, native american people. it talks about peoples protected speech being infringed upon. all kinds of allegations in this. the doj saying there was a lack of training accountability and supervision which allowed these problems to fester, as you mentioned, this is tied to the aftermath of the murder of george floyd. here is what attorney general, merrick garland, said about that specific case and how the practices they have found to be a part
people of cuyahoga county and the victims families. today s verdict is part of a sea of change that began over two years ago with this case and others across the nation. this case prompted the united states department of justice and governor john kasic and the attorney general mike dewine to investigate the patterns and practices of police departments, including cleveland s, around the state. these investigations have highlighted areas where help is needed or deficiencies exist, including training accountability and transparency although not fully implemented changes for the better have already begun. this is a different country than it was two and a half years ago on november 29th. the department of justice investigation continues and we are confident practices will improve and benefit the city of cleveland from whatever the results of their findings and agreement is. our goal is to improve the quality of justice that our