Baltimore officials ask for patience

Claim and counterclaim made about circumstances surrounding Freddie Gray death

Members of the National Guard sit parked in a humvee in the Sandtown neighborhood where Freddie Gray was arrested. Photograph:  Andrew Burton/Getty Images
Members of the National Guard sit parked in a humvee in the Sandtown neighborhood where Freddie Gray was arrested. Photograph: Andrew Burton/Getty Images

As protesters marched in several cities across the US, Baltimore officials asked for patience while prosecutors decide whether to charge six officers involved in the arrest of a black man who later died of injuries he sustained while in custody.

The office of Marilyn Mosby, the state's attorney, will include the internal report as part of its own investigation into the death of Freddie Gray, who suffered spinal injuries sometime between his April 12th arrest for carrying a switchblade knife and his arrival at a police station.

Mr Gray’s death a week later has become the latest flashpoint in a national outcry over the treatment of African-Americans and other minority groups by a white-dominated US law enforcement establishment.

People protesting the death of Freddie Gray and demanding police accountability move into the streets in the Sandtown neighborhood where Gray was arrested. Photograph:  Andrew Burton/Getty Images
People protesting the death of Freddie Gray and demanding police accountability move into the streets in the Sandtown neighborhood where Gray was arrested. Photograph: Andrew Burton/Getty Images
Mr Gray’s death  has become the latest flashpoint in a national outcry over the treatment of African-Americans and other minority groups by a white-dominated US law enforcement establishment.  Photograph:  Andrew Burton/Getty Images
Mr Gray’s death has become the latest flashpoint in a national outcry over the treatment of African-Americans and other minority groups by a white-dominated US law enforcement establishment. Photograph: Andrew Burton/Getty Images

After a night of rioting in Baltimore on Monday, protests spread to other major cities later in the week in a reprise of demonstrations last year set off by police killings of unarmed black men in Ferguson, Missouri; New York; and elsewhere.

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A few hundred protesters marched through Baltimore in a noisy but peaceful march on Thursday night, joined by NBA star Carmelo Anthony and other celebrities, ahead of a 10pm (2am Irish time) curfew that city officials said would continue through the weekend.

"I'm hoping that we will get justice," said Janai Peters (22) who works at an area hospital. She said city prosecutors must act quickly to resolve the case. "My hopes aren't high, but I am hoping for something positive."

A rally of about 1,000 people in Philadelphia briefly turned tense as protesters tried to march onto a highway and were blocked by police. In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a small group marched to mark the one-year anniversary of the shooting death of Dontre Hamilton, shot 14 times by a police officer during a struggle in a downtown park.

Test for new prosecutor

Ms Mosby, a 35-year-old African-American who took office in January, said her staff was regularly briefed by police investigators during the course of their investigation, and at the same time, her office has been conducting its own independent probe.

“We are not relying solely on their findings but rather the facts that we have gathered and verified,” Ms Mosby, a Democrat, said in a statement. “We ask for the public to remain patient and peaceful and to trust the process of the justice system.”

Ms Mosby faces the biggest test of her short career in trying to determine what exactly happened to 25-year-old Gray and whether any of the officers should face criminal charged. The six have been suspended from duty.

The daughter and granddaughter of police officers and the wife of a city councilman, Ms Mosby promised during her campaign to crack down on repeat offenders and promised to be more visible in the community than her predecessor.

Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake vowed to get justice done. She noted that she, Ms Mosby and attorney general Loretta Lynch, whose department is also investigating Mr Gray's death, were important figures in the case.

“If, with the nation watching, three black women at three different levels can’t get justice... for this community, you tell me where you’re going to get it in our country,” Ms Rawlings-Blake told reporters.

New questions surgace on Freddie Gray’s injuries

While there are no immediate plans to make the findings of the police report public, media reports on Thursday offered new perspectives about what may have happened to Freddie Gray.

A Washington Post story suggesting Mr Gray tried to hurt himself while being transported in a police van was rejected by a man who says he was in the vehicle at the time.

According to the newspaper a document written by a police investigator and obtained by the newspaper contained a report that a prisoner who was also in the van claimed he had heard sounds that suggested Mr Gray was banging his own head against the wall.

The other prisoner could not see Mr Gray because they were separated by a metal divider.

"I think it's unfortunate that these little things are coming out... People should take a deep breath and wait for the state's attorney to come out with the entire information," Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts told CNN.

However, a man claiming to be the second prisoner referred to by authorities has come forward to reject claims he told investigators Mr Gray caused his own injuries.

"And they're trying to make it seem like I told them that, I made it like Freddie Gray did that to himself," Donte Allen told CBS . "Why the [expletive] would he do that to himself ?"

Local television station WJLA said the medical examiner saw no evidence that Mr Gray suffered the fatal injury during his arrest, pointing instead to the injury happening during his ride in the police van, multiple law enforcement sources told the station.

The medical examiner found that Gray appeared to break his neck when his head slammed into the back of the van, the sources told WJLA. He also suffered a head wound matching a bolt jutting from the vehicle’s back door.

Police have already said Mr Gray was not wearing restraints during the journey, a violation of department policies.

The leaks did not impress protesters. School employee Gregory Baugh (37) called the new reports “bogus.”

“He had plenty of bruises all over him, that had to happen some way.”

It emerged on Thursday that a fourth, previously undisclosed stop, was made by the police van en route to the station house after footage from a private camera emerged.