BALTIMORE
— A massive march planned for Saturday to protest the death of a man
in police custody is now being billed as a "victory rally" after
Baltimore's top prosecutor filed criminal charges against the six
officers involved in the man's arrest.
The
thousands of marchers who are expected to hit the streets this weekend
will now do so to celebrate the decision by State's Attorney Marilyn
Mosby to charge the officers with felonies ranging from assault to
murder, and encourage continued peaceful demonstrations.
Freddie
Gray's death from spinal injuries a week after his April 12 arrest
provoked riots on the streets of West Baltimore on Monday and quickly
became a rallying cry against police brutality and social inequality in
the city. Mosby's announcement on Friday triggered celebrations on those
same streets.
Mosby
said that after reviewing the results of a police investigation turned
over to her just one day before, she had concluded Gray's arrest was
illegal and unjustified. She said 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 a small metal compartment in the vehicle.
The
officers missed five opportunities to help the injured and falsely
imprisoned detainee before he arrived at the police station no longer
breathing, Mosby added. They even rerouted the van to pick up another
passenger, she said.
The
police had no reason to stop or chase after Gray, Mosby said. They
falsely accused him of having an illegal switchblade when in fact it was
a legal pocketknife, and failed to strap him down with a seatbelt, a
direct violation of department policy, she said.
Gray's
stepfather, Robert Shipley, said the family was happy the officers were
charged, and he reiterated a plea to keep all public demonstrations
peaceful.
"We
are satisfied with today's charges; they are an important step in
getting justice for Freddie," Shipley said. "But if you are not coming
in peace, please don't come at all."
The
family lawyer, Billy Murphy, said the charges are "a first step but not
the last," adding that Baltimore now has an opportunity to set an
example for cities across the nation grappling with police brutality.
"The
overwhelming number of people who have protested over the days didn't
know Freddie personally, but the people of Philadelphia, New York,
Cincinnati, and in numerous cities and towns are expressing their
outrage that there are too many Freddie Grays," Murphy said. "If Freddie
Gray is not to die in vain, we must seize this opportunity to reform
police departments throughout this country, so there are no more days
and times like this."
A
lawyer hired by the police union insisted the officers did nothing
wrong. Attorney Michael Davey said Friday that Mosby has committed "an
egregious rush to judgment."
But
for others who saw Gray's arrest and death as a reflection of the
city's broad social and economic problems, the announcement of charges
prompted celebrations in the streets.
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," Otom said. "I'm so happy to see a day where the
pendulum has finally begun to swing."
Black Lawyers for Justice is expecting at least 10,000 people to show up for a protest rally Saturday in downtown Baltimore.
Malik Shabazz, the group's president, said he expects even more people to show up now that the officers have been charged.
"Our rally will proceed as a victory rally," he said. "It will be a rally for justice and against police brutality."
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