So, a couple of thoughts and questions come to mind.
1. Prosecutors response (linked above) reveals Mohamed Noor had worked a full 8 hour shift as a security guard for Wells Fargo Bank, immediately before beginning his 4:15pm to 2:15 am shift with the Minneapolis PD.
Is this permissible for all MPD officers?
Are there any “crew rest” requirements for officers before beginning their shift?
Are they permitted to work 16+ hour shifts while on duty as MPD officers?
2. Noor was known to have a number of behavioral responses to stress (detailed in the Prosecutor’s Response linked above) that would have been exacerbated by essentially pulling a 16 hour duty day.
Was Noor ever formally counseled about his own response to duty stressors?
What specific steps did he, or MPD take to mitigate Noor’s unusual “stress responses” to ordinary and extraordinary duty situations?
3. Is Noor’s hiring trajectory “typical” of
other officer candidates who dislike people in general, and have the serious behavioral responses to duty events that Noor did?
(Driving in circles, tunnel vision focus, inability to multi task, escalating minor encounters, failure to follow through with various aspects of the job, etc.)?
Or was Noor given some kind of leeway that other officer candidates would NOT have been given, so as to assure his hiring process went smoothly?
4. Were all Noor’s very serious behavioral issues and performance issues officially “overlooked” because it was MORE important that he be hired and publicly lauded for his role fulfilling “diversity” on the force?
Because that’s exactly how it looks from where I’m sitting. “Diversity” was clearly MUCH more important in the hiring process than COMPETENCE.
5. Noor was lauded quite publicly by the Mayor, and others, as the first Somali officer in the 5th precinct. Several lauded his role as a police officer as a
“calling”! (From a candidate who openly admitted to an employment psychiatrist to disliking most people??)
The bizarre psychological behaviors, difficulties interacting with people, serious difficulties while on supervised patrol as a cadet, and the extremely disturbing events 2 weeks before Damond’s shooting where he pointed his gun at the head of a motorist after pulling him over for a minor traffic violation?
How can that effusive praise be reconciled with the extreme details of we now know was in his hiring and performance file?
What we know about Mohamed Noor, Minneapolis officer who fatally shot Justine Damond