Saraswati Singh believes that a path to public safety is racial equity — and vice versa.
Saraswati Singh believes that a path to public safety is racial equity — and vice versa. Credit: Saraswati Singh for Hennepin County Attorney

Saraswati Singh is a prosecutor with the Ramsey County Attorney’s office. She said she is the most qualified candidate in the race because of her diversity of experiences in the legal system. But she also believes her personal experiences make her a uniquely good fit as the next Hennepin County Attorney. 

Singh, 38, has lived in Minneapolis for over 10 years but grew up in New York City. A descendant of immigrants from India, she grew up listening to stories of her grandfather being greeted by “white only” signs over drinking fountains or witnessing her father suffer discrimination following 9/11 because of his skin color and hair. When she was a kid, her mother banished the use of water guns — the see-through kind that looks like a little pistol — because a Black boy in the neighborhood was shot by police who mistook the water gun for a real gun. 

Singh believes that a path to public safety is racial equity — and vice versa. Take low-level drug cases. Singh said research shows that white people use drugs at a higher rate than Black people. 

“But if you go to court in Hennepin County or any county in Minnesota you will see an overwhelming majority of the people charged with drug offenses are Black,” Singh said. She believes that low-level drug cases are not worth the time and that those resources should be used to target violent crime. 

“This way, we are addressing the racial disparity piece and, at the same time, addressing public safety,” Singh said. 

As a Ramsey County prosecutor, Singh handles serious cases like murder, sexual assault, and domestic abuse. Singh also recruits, trains, and provides mentorship at the Ramsey County Attorney’s office. She led diversity and inclusion initiatives in the office like an education plan, training, and discussions on race since the death of George Floyd.

“We talk about how a lot of the people protesting were talking to us,” Singh said. 

Singh’s experience also includes time at the Minnesota Attorney General’s office, the U.S. Attorney’s office in Minneapolis, Legal Aid, and as a staffer for two federal judges. In those positions, she’s said she’s worked on civil and criminal cases ranging from civil rights and veterans issues to access to education and Social Security disability benefits. 

Singh, if elected, said that she would not prosecute abortion. An issue that is a priority for her is police accountability. 

Singh worked on keeping police accountable at the state AG’s office, where she worked with police departments in more than 60 counties in Minnesota. In one case, Singh learned an officer purposely did not follow the law during a traffic stop and wrote a police report that tried to hide that fact.

Singh reported the fabrication to the police officer’s supervisor. When she checked in later, she discovered that the officer was promoted. 

“Holding people accountable isn’t just prosecuting cases. It means that when you see behavior that is wrong, you take it seriously and the top person in management calls the other person in management, and it’s made clear that something needs to be done immediately,” Singh said. 

She considers police accountability a public safety issue because when police aren’t held accountable, she said, public trust in the legal system erodes. After Floyd was murdered, Singh said she spoke with prospective witnesses who initially refused to testify in cases “because they felt [prosecutors] were part of the system and that we were like [Derek] Chauvin.”

Singh said she would notify police leadership if she finds that an officer is behaving inappropriately and will see that “consequences escalate if the behavior continues.” Singh would also assign a Hennepin County attorney to the Minneapolis Police Department to “make sure they are getting the right training on excessive force, where the law is, and what best practices are.”

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6 Comments

  1. Ms. Singnh states ““But if you go to court in Hennepin County or any county in Minnesota you will see an overwhelming majority of the people charged with drug offenses are Black,” .
    Confusing to me – best data I have seen on this comes from the MSGC 2019 Controlled Substance Sentencing Practices presentation (( https://mn.gov/sentencing-guidelines/assets/MSGC2019ReportControlledSubstances_tcm30-504113.pdf )) which shows 66% of drug prosecutions in Minnesota are white people.

  2. Was it lying or not recalling correctly? I wish when people make these statements they would provide a fuller picture. And Hennepin has mental health court, veteran’s court, drug court, etc..

  3. If you look at the catch and release justice that is currently being dished out by the Ramsey County attorney’s office, it’s hard to believe that she is the kind of person needed in either Hennepin or Ramsey County Attorneys Offices. I’m all for holding cops accountable, but what about felons in possession of firearms or carjackers? They need to be locked up and taken off the streets.

  4. It’s interesting how the use of the term “racial equity” can be a trigger for some. Not that they’re racist, no, no, no, but we just can’t talk about it.

    1. “Singh believes that a path to public safety is racial equity — and vice versa.”

      Of course if she would have said it the other way: “The path to racial equity is public safety” all of the complainers here would have just nodded their heads in agreement.

      Here’s a hint: rather than go off on a rant about all things liberal you don’t like (gasp! racial equity!), maybe a few words on a candidate you do like. It is apparent that of all the DA reviews presented the candidate who spoke most forcefully on getting tougher on prosecution & sentencing is Martha Holton Dimick (who, I am sure, is also concerned for racial equity).

      “Dimick’s plan for reducing the number of murders and other violent crimes across the county is to send a strong message: “Violent criminals will be prosecuted.”

      Dimick believes in criminal justice reform — like ensuring that judges make decisions that are equal and consistent for everyone — but she said that concerns of mass incarceration in the state are overblown.

      “There are people running around shouting about high incarceration rates,” Dimick said. “Not in Minnesota. They are talking about other places in the country”

      https://www.minnpost.com/elections/2022/07/meet-the-hennepin-county-attorney-candidate-martha-holton-dimick/

      She has my vote.

    2. “And someone talking about racial equity in the way this candidate is suggests that she is more concerned with protecting criminals than the victims of crime.”

      It suggests nothing of the kind, unless you think racial equity and enforcement of the criminal laws are two mutually exclusive things.

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