The Mercury News

Mistrial in Baltimore

Case hinged on officer’s actions while Freddie Gray was in custody

- By Juliet Linderman and David Dishneau Associated Press

BALTIMORE — The first effort to convict an officer in Freddie Gray’s death from a broken neck in a Baltimore police van ended Wednesday with a hung jury and a mistrial.

Officials appealed for calm as small crowds protested along streets lined with police officers. The situation was quiet at North and Pennsylvan­ia, the intersecti­on where the worst rioting happened in April as parts of West Baltimore were set on fire.

William Porter’s mistrial is a setback for prosecutor­s trying to respond to a citizenry frustrated by violent crime and allegation­s of police misconduct.

Homicides have soared and the pressure on city officials has been unrelentin­g since Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby charged six officers in Gray’s death.

About 30 protesters chanting “send those killer cops to jail” outside the courthouse switched gears after the mistrial was announced, chanting “No justice, no peace!” and “Black Lives Matter.”

The case hinged not on what Porter did, but what prosecutor­s said he didn’t do. He was accused of failing to get medical help for a critically wounded Gray and was charged with manslaught­er, assault, misconduct in office and reckless endangerme­nt, carrying maximum sentences totaling 25 years.

The judge planned to discuss a possible retrial with A protester yells at members of the Baltimore City Sheriffs Office on Wednesday in front of the Baltimore City Circuit Courthouse East after the verdict was announced. both sides in his chambers on Thursday.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings Blake and the new police commission­er she installed after last April’s riots warned people against more violence.

“We will not, we cannot be defined by the unrest of the spring,” the mayor said.

“Protesters who are lawfully assembled have a friend in the Baltimore Police Department,” Commission­er Kevin Davis said. “Folks who choose to commit crimes and break things and hurt people are no longer protesters.”

Mosby wouldn’t comment: “Gag order,” she said, smiling and shaking her head inside the courthouse.

Attorney Billy Murphy, who obtained a $6.4 million settlement for Gray’s family from the city before Porter’s trial, called the mistrial “a temporary bump on the road to justice.”

The racially diverse jury of seven men and five women deliberate­d for about 16 hours over three days.

They indicated they were deadlocked on Tuesday, but Circuit Judge Barry Williams told them to keep at it, even as he denied their requests for help.

“It is clear you will not come to a unanimous agreement on any of the four charges,” the judge said Wednesday. “You have clearly been diligent.”

The Baltimore NAACP asked people to control their “frustratio­n and anger” and respect “the rights of all people respected, on all sides.”

At least two activists were arrested, including Kwame Rose, a young black man who called the mistrial an “injustice.”

“We are going to fight for justice until it becomes a reality in our lives. A mistrial means that the prosecutio­n did not do their jobs good enough,” he said.

 ?? ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES PHOTOS ?? Protesters march through the streets of Baltimore on Wednesday after a mistrial was declared in the trial of Baltimore police Officer William G. Porter. The judge declared a mistrial on the third day of deliberati­ons in Porter's trial.
ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES PHOTOS Protesters march through the streets of Baltimore on Wednesday after a mistrial was declared in the trial of Baltimore police Officer William G. Porter. The judge declared a mistrial on the third day of deliberati­ons in Porter's trial.
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