Mayor of Baltimore lifts curfew imposed on city

Stephanie Rawlings-Blake says she believes sufficient calm has returned after week of looting and arson

A police officer douses a man, who was hit by pepper spray after defying a curfew, with water as he lies handcuffed  in west Baltimore, Maryland. Photograph: Reuters
A police officer douses a man, who was hit by pepper spray after defying a curfew, with water as he lies handcuffed in west Baltimore, Maryland. Photograph: Reuters

The mayor of Baltimore lifted a 10pm to 5am curfew on Sunday she had imposed on the city last week after a night of looting and arson that followed the death of a young black man from injuries suffered while in police custoday.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said she believed sufficient calm had returned to Baltimore to allow her to end a curfew put in place last Tuesday after violence erupted over the death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray.

“My goal has always been to not have the curfew in place a single day longer than was necessary,” the mayor said on her Twitter account. “I believe we have reached that point today.”

A man is detained after being pepper sprayed in the face by police at the end of a day of protests in the Sandtown neighborhood where Freddie Gray was arrested on Saturday  in Baltimore, Maryland. Photograph: Getty
A man is detained after being pepper sprayed in the face by police at the end of a day of protests in the Sandtown neighborhood where Freddie Gray was arrested on Saturday in Baltimore, Maryland. Photograph: Getty
Residents demanding justice for Freddie Gray take part in a post-march celebration on the streets of west Baltimore on Saturday. Thousands of people took to the streets of Baltimore as anger over the death of a young black man turned to hopes for change following swift criminal charges against six police officers. Photograph: Reuters
Residents demanding justice for Freddie Gray take part in a post-march celebration on the streets of west Baltimore on Saturday. Thousands of people took to the streets of Baltimore as anger over the death of a young black man turned to hopes for change following swift criminal charges against six police officers. Photograph: Reuters

The surprise announcement on Friday by the city’s chief prosecutor that she was bringing criminal charges against the six police officers involved in Gray’s arrest has helped to defuse outrage over Gray’s death.

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The looting and arson on Monday punctuated what had been a mostly peaceful series of protests in the Maryland city since Gray's death a week after his April 12th arrest.

The demonstrations in the mostly black city of 625,000 were a reprise of a nationwide wave of protests over police brutality that erupted last year after killings of unarmed black men by white officers in Missouri, New York and elsewhere.

Investigations into the deaths of unarmed black men last year in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York had concluded the police officers involved had acted within the law, and grand juries decided against indicting them, prompting an outcry.

On Saturday afternoon, hundreds of people gathered in Baltimore in a rally praising the decision by prosecutor Marilyn Mosby to charge one of the officers involved in Gray's arrest with murder and five others with lesser crimes.

Mosby, a 35-year-old black woman who took office in January, said the state medical examiner had ruled Gray’s death a homicide. She said he was unlawfully arrested and the officers repeatedly ignored his pleas for medical help while he was handcuffed, shackled and lying face down in the back of a police van.

The mood of Saturday’s rally was almost celebratory in sharp contrast to the outrage expressed earlier in the week, especially on Monday, when more than a dozen law enforcement officers were hurt and more than 200 people were arrested.

Still, Baltimore police arrested at least a dozen people on Saturday for violating the curfew, which has imposed hardships on city businesses and residents alike.

Maryland’s Governor, Larry Hogan, called for a day of prayer and reconciliation on Sunday.

Reuters