Baltimore cheers arrests
6 officers charged with felonies in death that sparked outrage
BALTIMORE — Rage turned to relief in Baltimore on Friday when the city’s top prosecutor charged six police officers with felonies ranging from assault to murder in the death of Freddie Gray.
State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby said Mr. Gray’s arrest was illegal and unjustified, and that his neck was broken because he was handcuffed, shackled and placed head-first into a police van, where his pleas for medical attention were repeatedly ignored as he bounced around inside the small metal box.
The swiftness of her announcement, less than a day after receiving the police department’s criminal investigation and official autopsy results, took the city by surprise. So, too, did her detailed description, based in part on her
office’s independent investigation, of the evidence supporting probable cause to charge all six officers with felonies.
The police had no reason to stop or chase after Mr. Gray, Ms. Mosby said. They falsely accused him of having an illegal switchblade, when, in fact, it was a legal pocketknife. The van driver and the other officers failed to strap him down with a seatbelt, a direct violation of department policy, and they ignored Mr. Gray’s repeated pleas for medical attention, even rerouting the van to pick up another passenger.
Ms. Mosby did not say whether there was any indication the driver deliberately drove erratically, causing Mr. Gray’s body to strike the van’s interior. In 2005, a man died of a fractured spine after he was transported in a Baltimore police van in handcuffs and without a seat belt. At a civil trial, an attorney for his family successfully argued that police had given him a “rough ride.”
The officers transporting Mr. Gray missed five opportunities to help an injured and falsely imprisoned detainee before he arrived at the police station no longer breathing, Ms. Mosby said. Along the way, “Mr. Gray suffered a severe and critical neck injury as a result of being handcuffed, shackled by his feet and unrestrained inside of the BPD wagon,” she concluded.
Her announcement triggered celebrations across the same West Baltimore streets that were smoldering just four days earlier, when Mr. Gray’s funeral led to riots and looting.
“We are satisfied with today’s charges,” Mr. Gray’s stepfather, Richard Shipley, told a news conference. “These charges are an important step in getting justice for Freddie.”
But a lawyer hired by the police union insisted that the officers had done nothing wrong. Attorney Michael Davey said Friday that Ms. Mosby has committed “an egregious rush to judgment.” He added, “We have grave concerns about the fairness and integrity of the prosecution of our officers.”
Ms. Mosby rejected a police union request to step aside and appoint a special prosecutor to handle the case, and said honorable police officers should have no problem working with prosecutors in Baltimore.
Other law enforcement veterans worried that the charges could have a chilling effect. Robert Leight, a former detective in Pennsylvania, who has worked for the FBI and as a federal prosecutor and defense attorney, said, “The biggest danger is that the police officer will not properly perform his duties. It puts him at risk, it puts the other officers around him at risk, and it puts the public at risk,” he said. “A police officer must react instinctively as he has been trained. If a police officer first thinks about what liabilities he will be facing, it’s too late.”
Mr. Gray was stopped by police in Sandtown, a poor, overwhelmingly African-American neighborhood in West Baltimore. He locked eyes with a police officer and then ran. Two blocks later, they pinned him to the sidewalk, handcuffed him and dragged him into a transport van, a scene captured on a bystander’s cell phone video and shown around the world.
Ms. Mosby said the police review, the autopsy and her own office’s investigation all point to homicide. The officers were booked Friday on charges ranging from assault and manslaughter, carrying 10-year prison sentences, to second-degree “depraved heart” murder, which could put the van driver in prison for 30 years if convicted.
In a city that struggles daily with pervasive poverty and widespread joblessness, failing schools, drug addiction, a crumbling infrastructure and corruption, Mr. Gray’s death has become emblematic of the broad social and economic problems holding Baltimore down. But unlike other major cities grappling with police killings, Baltimore’s mayor, state’s attorney and police commissioner are black, like the majority of the city’s population.
Helen Holton, a 20-year veteran city councilmember, said the announcement by Ms. Mosby, who accused her predecessor of being out of touch with the community, is “a defining moment in the future of Baltimore.”
“It’s time. I hate that Freddie Gray is not here,” Ms. Holton said. “I hate it, but to Freddie Gray’s legacy, he has served as the tipping point for us to take a real inside look at what many people have chosen to ignore.”
The city, which has been on edge since Mr. Gray’s death April 19, remains under a nighttime curfew, with 2,000 National Guard troops augmenting police reinforcements from around the state of Maryland.
As the 10 p.m. curfew began Friday, some arrests were made — unlike Wednesday and Thursday nights — as scores of protesters refused to leave the streets and remained in an area near City Hall.
Malik Shabazz, president of Black Lawyers for Justice, said today’s protest march will now be a “victory rally,” and that Ms. Mosby is “setting a standard for prosecutors all over the nation.”
At City Hall, Andrea Otom, 41, sobbed with something like joy. “You have to be able to expect that at some time, the pendulum will swing in your favor, and in the black community, we’ve seen it over and over and over where it doesn’t,” she said. “I’m so happy to see a day where the pendulum has finally begun to swing.”
University of Maryland sociologist Rashawn Ray said the murder and manslaughter charges in Mr. Gray’s death shape a debate that goes much deeper than legal limits on use of force by police officers. It has triggered the frustration, anger and hopelessness of generations of disenfranchised people in Baltimore’s most marginalized neighborhoods, he said.
“This definitely seems like the first time in recent history that the state has done what the community feels is the right thing,” Mr. Ray said. “Maybe we are progressing toward the equality that we should have been moving toward decades ago.”