Judge ends Hartford police consent decree despite concerns

FILE - Police officers respond after an officer was stabbed in Spectra Boutique Apartments on May 17, 2018, in Hartford, Conn. A judge on Friday, April 14, 2023, has ended the nearly 50 years of federal oversight of police in Hartford, despite continued concerns the department still has not hired enough minority officers to reflect the city's large Black and Hispanic populations. (Brad Horrigan/Hartford Courant via AP, File)

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A judge has ended the nearly 50 years of federal oversight of police in Hartford, Connecticut, despite continued concerns the department still has not hired enough minority officers to reflect the city's large Black and Hispanic populations.

U.S. District Judge Kari Dooley in Bridgeport issued a 10-page ruling late Friday saying the plaintiffs failed to prove the police department was violating any part of the original 1973 consent decree agreement or revisions made to it in 2010. Dooley approved the city's request to dissolve the consent decree, which was to have ended four years after the 2010 revisions but was later extended.

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