The Department of Justice is investigating the Baltimore Police Department over allegations that officers routinely use excessive, sometimes deadly force, conduct unlawful arrests and engage in discriminatory policing.
From Justice Dept headquarters in Washington, DC on Friday, US
Attorney General Loretta Lynch confirmed that the DoJ has
officially opened a probe concerning the police force upon being
urged by Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake to see if
federal investigators can find further evidence of wrongdoing
after charges were brought in last month’s death of Freddie Gray,
a local man who died in police custody.
Lynch said the DoJ will examine “whether the Baltimore Police
Department has engaged in a pattern or practice of violations of
the Constitution or federal law” starting immediately. She
added that the DoJ investigation will differ from the federal
government’s other interactions with the city’s police force in
that it will involve determining whether officers violated the US
Constitution and the civil rights of Baltimoreans.
BREAKING: DOJ announces civil rights investigation of #Baltimore police practices
— Reuters Top News (@Reuters) May 8, 2015
"Ultimately, this process is meant to ensure that officers
are being provided with the tools they need - including training,
policy guidance and equipment - to be more effective, to partner
with civilians, and to strengthen public safety," Lynch
said.
Friday’s announcement came less than a week after Mayor
Rawlings-Blake implored the Justice Dept to conduct an
investigation of the force following Gray’s death.
“Such an investigation is essential if we are going to
rebuild trust in the community," she said.
Attorney General Loretta Lynch statement on #Baltimore investigation – LIVE on C-SPAN http://t.co/EZgawnEIcspic.twitter.com/llel5K8m7h
— CSPAN (@cspan) May 8, 2015
Lynch said the probe will examine policies, practices and
available data relating to the Baltimore PD, and the results will
be published in a report similar to one released last year about
the Ferguson police.
On Friday afternoon, the police union in Baltimore said in a statement that it welcomes the involvement of the DoJ and “look[s] forward to working with their representatives to heal the wounds of our city and to improve the relationship between the community and our department.” In the same memo, though, the Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police added that it believes the DoJ should consider investigating Mayor Rawlings as part of the review in that “her leadership of and involvement in the Police Department also deserves evaluation.”
FOP #3 response to DOJ announcement 5/8/15 pic.twitter.com/kTHdGPLGAw
— Baltimore City FOP (@FOP3) May 8, 2015
Gray, 25, died last month a week after he sustained injuries
while in the custody of Baltimore police. He was arrested on
April 12 for a charge that a state prosecutor has since declared
to be invalid, and suffered several spinal injuries in the back
of a police van while being transported. Marilyn Mosby,
Maryland’s prosecutor for the city of Baltimore, has since
announced charges against six of the officers involved in the
incident.
Last year, the officer-involved shooting death of Michael Brown,
an unarmed 18-year-old black man, prompted the DoJ to investigate
the police department in Ferguson, MO. The report, published in
March, “revealed a pattern or practice of unlawful conduct
within the Ferguson Police Department that violates the First,
Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution,” according to the report.