Breaking...All charges dropped on All officers in Freddy Grey case!!?

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Give her a break...
She was a young, new idealogical DA, trying to make a name for herself. That she did. :biggrin:

Seriously though, I hope the officers can reclaim their lives now.
Freddie Gray case: Charges against three remaining officers dropped

Charges dropped against the three remaining officers in the Freddie case

Chicago Tribune · 5 minutes ago

Prosecutors dropped all charges against the three officers remaining in the arrest and death of Freddie Gray Wednesday morning, …

Breaking news now
Disbarment should be in order for DA that brought these charges. Fucking Democrat piece of shit.
 
I just hope the officers make it through this. It apparently ruined Darren wilsons life. Facts be damned
 
The DA, Marilyn Mosby is going to hold a press conference a little later today.
 
She emotionally went for throats, rather than legally approach the case.
I wonder if she could have gotten a negligence charge of some type for the van driver, if she had approached the case differently.
Just another dead negro. Look away now America.

Each defendant had their own case, and in the end nothing could be proven against them individually.
I
 
Probably the right decision

And the family got a boat load of money as well

A bad guy gone from the streets in a very iffy manner
 
Massachusetts drops charges against all officers in Freddie Gray case...
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State drops charges against all officers in Freddie Gray case
Jul 27, 2016 - Judge rescinds gag order in cases
Charges have been dropped against Officers Garrett Miller, William Porter and Sgt. Alicia White, three of six officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray. Miller was supposed to be the fifth of six officers to stand trial in connection with Gray's death last year. What was supposed to be a Kastigar hearing Wednesday turned instead to the prosecution dropping all charges against Miller, Porter and White. A gag order put in place for all those associated with the Gray case has been lifted. Baltimore City State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby is expected to hold a news conference at about 11 a.m. Miller had been charged with assault, reckless endangerment and two counts of misconduct in office.

Miller was granted limited immunity and compelled by prosecutors to testify in the other officers' trials. He was called to testify against Officer Edward Nero, where he said he was the lone officer who physically arrested Gray on April 12, 2015. Miller was one of three arresting officers on bike patrol on the morning of Gray's arrest. Prosecutors said he didn't have probable cause to arrest Gray and by not seat belting him in the police transport van, he put Gray's life in danger. Experts have testified that Gray suffered a fatal neck injury in the van, but no one has been able to prove when or how the injury occurred. Prosecutors made similar arguments in the trials of Lt. Brian Rice and Nero, who were both cleared of all charges. The van driver, Officer Caesar Goodson, who faced the most serious charges in Gray’s death including second-degree depraved heart murder, was also acquitted. Those three trials were decided by Williams because each officer opted for a bench trial over a jury trial.

Officer William Porter was the lone officer charged in the Gray case to opt for a jury trial. His trial ended in a hung jury in December. Porter was set for a retrial in September. White was the final officer who was supposed go on trial in connection with Gray’s death. Her trial was scheduled for October. Legal experts agree that getting a conviction in any of these cases was going to be difficult. "It's unfortunate that you raise the expectations that justice is going to be done," attorney Warren Brown, a courtroom observer through these trials said. "(Then) you put the officers and their families through all of this. You put a further wedge between the state's attorney's office and the police department and why? Just do a thorough intellectually honest investigation and let the pieces fall where they may. The state decided that they were going to move forward with these cases"

University of Baltimore law professor David Jaros said it was probably the right decision to drop the charges given the legal hurdles the state faced. "When you look at the judge's reasoning in the other case, he was open to the possibility that they would have more evidence. But absent more evidence there didn't appear to be a path to a conviction. And if you can't get a conviction at some point you have to fold.

State drops charges against all officers in Freddie Gray case
 

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