Dayton wants police training fund named for Philando Castile

Published 8:19 am Friday, July 7, 2017

By Tim Nelson and Brian Bakst

MPR.org/90.1 FM

ST. PAUL — Gov. Mark Dayton on Thursday marked the first anniversary of the death of Philando Castile by recommending the state’s Peace Officer Standards and Training Board name a new $12 million training fund after Castile.

Email newsletter signup

The fund is aimed at helping provide training opportunities for law enforcement officials working with diverse communities. The money was approved by the Legislature earlier this year.

A letter from the governor requesting the change noted he was following the recommendation of the Governor’s Council on Law Enforcement and Community Relations.

Dayton also named Castile’s uncle, Clarence Castile, among three appointments to the POST board, which regulates police training programs and licenses police officers. Castile will be a public member of the board, joining 14 other members, most of them law enforcement officers. Castile’s appointment is effective next week.

“We need this extra training for our police officers,” said Valerie Castile, Philando’s mother. “Because at the end of the day, everyone wants to go home. The police wants to go home and the civilian wants to go home. And if we can combine our minds and work together as human beings, then that will happen.”

Dayton said members of the public also need to work harder to ease tensions with law enforcement.

“I’ve been on police ridealongs and the way some people treat police who are there for their safety and protection is just really appalling,” he told reporters. “We all need to broaden our understanding that we’re all human beings and we’re not demarked by our race or the color of our uniform.”

Philando Castile was shot and killed last July 6 during a Falcon Heights traffic stop by St. Anthony police officer Jeronimo Yanez. Yanez was charged with manslaughter in Castile’s death. Jurors found him not guilty on all charges June 16.

Dayton on Thursday called Castile’s shooting “one of the very most traumatic events that has occurred in my six and a half years as governor of Minnesota, and it’s had long-lasting traumatic effects on so many people.”