The Mercury News

Prosecutor drops charges against Baltimore cops

City’s state’s attorney concedes after three trials that conviction­s were unlikely

- By Kevin Rector and Justin Fenton Baltimore Sun

BALTIMORE — Prosecutor­s dropped all remaining charges against three Baltimore police officers accused in the arrest and death of Freddie Gray in a downtown courtroom on Wednesday morning, concluding one of the highest-profile criminal cases in Baltimore history.

The startling move was an apparent acknowledg­ment of the unlikeliho­od of a conviction following the acquittals of three other officers on similar and more serious charges by Circuit Judge Barry G. Williams, who was expected to preside over the remaining trials as well.

It also means the office of Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby will secure no conviction­s

in the case after more than a year of dogged fighting, against increasing­ly heavy odds, to hold someone criminally accountabl­e in Gray’s death.

About three dozen protesters gathered outside of City Hall during a weekly demonstrat­ion against police violence, this time just hours after Mosby dismissed the three remaining cases against the officers.

Organizer Tawanda Jones said that she wasn’t surprised prosecutor­s dropped all of the charges against the three remaining officers in the Freddie Gray case. Jones says that given the previous acquittals in the cases against the officers’ co-defendants, she would have made the same choice as Mosby.

Still, Jones says she’s grateful that Mosby tried.

“She did something we never saw happen before,” she says.

Officer William Porter’s trial ended with a hung jury and a mistrial in December, before Williams acquitted officers Edward Nero and Caesar Goodson and Lt. Brian Rice at bench trials in May, June, and July, respective­ly.

In a hearing Wednesday meant to start the trial of Officer Garrett Miller, Chief Deputy State’s Attorney Michael Schatzow told Williams that the state was dropping all charges against Miller, Porter and Sgt. Alicia White.

Porter had been scheduled to be retried in September, and White had been scheduled to be tried in October.

“All of our clients are thrilled with what happened today, and we’ll be making a comment later to address the details of what happened,” said Catherine Flynn, Miller’s attorney, outside the courthouse.

The officers still face possible administra­tive discipline. Internal investigat­ions, with the help of outside police agencies, are underway.

Gray, 25, suffered severe spinal cord injuries in the back a police van in April 2015 and died a week after his arrest. His death sparked widespread, peaceful protests against police brutality, and his funeral was followed by rioting, looting and arson.

At a news conference in West Baltimore, near where Gray was arrested, Mosby defended her decision to bring the charges against the officers, and said that “as a mother,” the decision to drop them was “agonizing.”

But, given Williams’ acquittal of Nero, Goodson and Rice and the likelihood that the remaining officers would also choose bench trials before him, Mosby said she had to acknowledg­e the “dismal likelihood” that her office would be able to secure a conviction.

“After much thought and prayer, it has become clear that without being able to work with an independen­t investigat­ory agency from the very start, without having a say in the election of whether cases proceed in front of a judge or jury, without communal oversight of police in this community, without substantiv­e reforms to the current criminal justice system, we could try this case 100 times and cases just like it and we would still end up with the same result,” she said.

She said there is an “inherent bias” whenever “police police themselves.” She said the charges she brought were not an indictment of the entire Baltimore Police Department, but she also broadly condemned the actions and testimony of some officers involved in Gray’s arrest or in the department’s investigat­ion of the incident — alleging “consistent bias” at “every stage.”

She said she is not “antipolice,” but “anti-police brutality.” She also noted the “countless sacrifices” of her prosecutor­s in the case, including Schatzow and Deputy State’s Attorney Janice Bledsoe, and said her office will continue to “fight for a fair and equitable justice system for all.”

Shortly after Mosby’s news conference, the officers, their defense attorneys and leaders of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3, the union that represents the officers and paid for their defense, held their own.

Attorney Ivan Bates, who represents White and spoke on behalf of all of the officers and their attorneys, described the last year as a “nightmare” for the officers. He reiterated the defense’s argument in all of the cases that the officers were justified in their actions. The officers did not speak.

Lt. Gene Ryan, the FOP president, said “justice has been done.” He also described Mosby’s comments at her news conference as “outrageous and uncalled for and simply untrue.”

In clearing Nero, Goodson and Rice, Williams had repeatedly said that prosecutor­s presented little or no evidence to support their broader theory in the case — that the officers acted unreasonab­ly, and willfully disregarde­d their training and general orders, when they decided not to secure Gray in a seat belt, and that the decision directly led to his death.

 ?? STEVE RUARK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gloria Darden, center, Freddie Gray’s mother, cries at a news conference Wednesday after Baltimore prosecutor­s dropped charges against officers in Gray’s death.
STEVE RUARK/ASSOCIATED PRESS Gloria Darden, center, Freddie Gray’s mother, cries at a news conference Wednesday after Baltimore prosecutor­s dropped charges against officers in Gray’s death.

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