The Justice Dept. Will Investigate the Death of Freddie Gray

21 Apr, 2015

The Justice Department said Tuesday it has opened a civil rights investigation into the death of Freddie Gray, a black man who suffered a fatal spinal-cord injury under mysterious circumstances after he was handcuffed and put in the back of a police van.

After the probe was announced, at least 1,000 people gathered at a previously planned rally at the site of Gray’s arrest. Protesters marched to a police station a couple of blocks away, chanting and holding signs that read “Black Lives Matter” and “No Justice, No Peace” – slogans that have come to embody what demonstrators believe is widespread mistreatment of blacks by police.

Gray, 25, was taken into custody April 12 after police “made eye contact” with him and another man in an area known for drug activity, police said. Gray was handcuffed and put in a transport van. At some point during his roughly 30-minute ride, the van was stopped and Gray’s legs were shackled when an officer felt he was becoming “irate,” police said.

Police Commissioner Anthony Batts said that Gray asked for an inhaler, and then several times asked for medical care. He was eventually rushed to a hospital.

Gray died Sunday – a week after his arrest – of what police described as “a significant spinal injury.”

Exactly how he was injured and what happened in the van is still not known.

Justice Department spokeswoman Dena Iverson said investigators are “gathering information to determine whether any prosecutable civil rights violation occurred.”

It’s not uncommon for federal investigators to look into allegations of excessive police force. Justice Department investigations in the last year include probes into the fatal shooting of an unarmed black 18-year-old in Ferguson, Missouri – a case that resulted in no charges against the officer – and an ongoing review of a police chokehold death of a New York City man.

The mayor said she welcomed the Justice Department probe.

“Whenever a police force conducts an internal investigation, there are always appropriate questions of transparency and impartiality,” she said. “My goal has always been to get answers to the questions so many of us are still asking with regards to Mr. Gray’s death.”

In the Baltimore case, the six suspended officers have been on the force anywhere from three years to 18 years.

According to court documents, Officer Garrett Miller accused Gray of carrying a switchblade, which was discovered in Gray’s pocket after he was stopped.

The other suspended officers were identified as:

– Lt. Brian Rice, 41, with the department since 1997.

– Sgt. Alicia White, 30, with the department since 2010.

– Officer Caesar Goodson, 45, who has been there since 1999.

– Officers William Porter and Edward Nero, who along with Miller, all joined in 2012.

Kim Deachilla, a spokeswoman for the Baltimore Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3, said a law firm that contracts with the union is representing them.

The officers’ specific roles in the arrest were not released by city officials. Bystander video of the arrest shows officers on bicycles, in patrol cars and outside the transport van.

At a news conference Monday, officials vowed transparency and pledged to hold those found responsible accountable. Batts said the investigation will be completed by May 1 and the results will be sent to the state attorney’s office to determine whether criminal charges will be filed. Batts also said he is ordering that police review and rewrite “effective immediately” its policies on moving prisoners and providing them with medical attention.

AP 

Image Baltimore Sun 

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