Family, Baltimore reach $6.4 million settlement
Son’s death after arrest sparked riots; board must OK deal.
— The parents of Freddie Gray have reached a tentative $6.4 million settlement with the city of Baltimore, nearly five months after their 25-year-old son was critically injured in police custody, sparking days of protests and rioting.
The deal, announced Tuesday, appeared to be among the largest settlements in police death cases in recent years and came just days before a judge is set to decide whether to change the venue for the trial for six officers charged in Gray’s death.
Gray suffered a spinal injury April 12 in the back of a prisoner transport van after he was arrested. The 25-year-old black man died at the hospital a week later. In the aftermath, he became a symbol of the contentious relationship between the police and African-Americans in Baltimore and across the nation.
The settlement still needs the approval of a board that oversees city spending. It is set to meet this morning.
“The proposed settlement agreement going before the Board of Estimates should not be interpreted as a judgment on the guilt or innocence of the officers facing trial,” Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said in a news release. “This settlement is being proposed solely because it is in the best interest of the city, and avoids costly and protracted litigation that would only make it more difficult for our city to heal and potentially cost taxpayers many millions more in damages.”
Rawlings-Blake refused to comment further.
The settlement does not resolve any factual disputes, and expressly does not constitute an admission of liability on the part of the city, its police department or any of the officers, the press release said.
In July, New York City settled for $5.9 million with the family of Eric Garner, an unarmed black man who died after being put in a white police officer’s chokehold. The city of Chicago settled in 2001 a wrongful death lawsuit by the family of LaTanya Haggerty, who was shot to death by police, for $18 million.
The proposed payment in the Gray case is more than the $5.7 million the city of Baltimore paid in total for 102 court judgments and settlements for alleged police misconduct between 2011 and last fall, according to an investigation by The Baltimore Sun.
The head of the city’s police union condemned the agreement and urged the Board of Estimates to reject it.
“To suggest that there is any reason to settle prior to the adjudication of the pending criminal cases is obscene and without regard to the fiduciary responsibility owed to the taxpaying citizens of the city,” Lt. Gene Ryan said in a statement.