LET'S FIGHT BACK

LET'S FIGHT BACK
GOD BLESS AMERICA

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Joy, relief in Baltimore as police are charged in black man's death


Reuters 
BALTIMORE (Reuters) - Baltimore residents cautiously celebrated news on Friday that six police officers involved in the arrest of Freddie Gray face criminal charges, a marked contrast to recent rioting over fraught relations between police and the African-American community.
Residents shouted with joy, embraced one another and honked car horns to hail the swift action by Baltimore city's chief prosecutor to file charges in the death of Gray, a black man who suffered severe spinal injuries while in police custody.
"I am proud for Baltimore," said Mae McKinney, 48, waving a large American flag. "I feel so happy, mostly happy that this wasn't swept under the rug and someone did something about it."
Pastor Jamal Bryant and others raise their fists during a protest march around the Baltimore Central Booking and Intake Center, Friday, May 1, 2015, i...
Pastor Jamal Bryant and others raise their fists during a protest march around the Baltimore Central Booking and …
A festive crowd gathered in West Baltimore, where Gray was arrested on April 12, chanting "Freddie! Freddie!" Uniformed police officials mingled in the crowd, while others in riot gear and National Guard troops stood at the side.
Although largely peaceful protests followed Gray's death, rioting broke out on Monday after his funeral. Dozens of buildings and vehicles were burned, 20 police officers were injured and more than 200 people were arrested.
Rev. Osagyefo Sekou, a civil rights activist, said he believed the decision to charge the officers was due to the days of protest.
"It was the people out in the streets that made this happen," Sekou said while walking in a march that started in Baltimore's Inner Harbor tourist district. "It is up to us to stay out here, to keep up the pressure."
Prosecutor Marilyn Mosby's decision stood in sharp contrast to cases last year in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York City where prosecutors found officers had not broken the law in the deaths of unarmed black men and grand juries declined to indict them. Those cases set off weeks of sometimes violent protests.
Despite the relief that swept through Baltimore, some residents noted it was a single step in an ongoing struggle to improve relations between police and poor minority communities, particularly young black men.
Demonstrators march in the streets of Baltimore, Maryland May 1, 2015. Baltimore residents cautiously celebrated news on Friday that six police office...
Demonstrators march in the streets of Baltimore, Maryland May 1, 2015. Baltimore residents cautiously celebrated …
"Justice still hasn't prevailed yet," said college student Earl Tillman, 46. "This is a much bigger issue than Baltimore."
Tillman said he would have liked to see more serious charges filed against more of the officers and cautioned that the officers could escape conviction at trial.
Mosby said the Maryland medical examiner had ruled Gray's death a homicide. Gray, 25, succumbed to his injuries in a hospital on April 19. One officer was charged with second-degree murder and manslaughter and two others with manslaughter.
"I have heard your calls for 'no justice, no peace,' however, your peace is sincerely needed as I work to deliver justice on behalf of Freddie Gray," Mosby said at a news conference.
In New York, a crowd of protesters waved banners for Gray as part of a larger May 1 International Labor Day demonstration touching on workers rights and wages as well.
"May Day for Freddie Gray," protesters shouted through loudspeakers. One person was observed being arrested by New York police.
(Additional reporting by Daniel Bases and Zachary Goelman, Writing by Ellen Wulfhorst, Editing by Grant McCool, Tiffany Wu and Ken Wills)
Related video:

No comments:

Post a Comment