Baltimore police routinely violated
rights - U.S. Justice Department
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[August 10, 2016]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
African-American residents in Baltimore are routinely subjected to
unconstitutional stops, arrests and excessive force by the Baltimore
Police Department, a scathing federal report released on Tuesday said.
The 163-page U.S. Justice Department report details an investigation
launched after the death of black detainee Freddie Gray last year that
found the Baltimore Police Department engages in a pattern of conduct
that violates the constitution or federal law.
"This pattern or practice is driven by systemic deficiencies in BPD's
policies, training, supervision and accountability structures that fail
to equip officers with the tools they need to police effectively and
within the bounds of the federal law," the report said.
However, the department "has already begun laying the foundation for
reform by self-initiating changes to its policies, training, data
management, and accountability systems", it added.
A spokesman said the department would not comment until a scheduled news
conference on Wednesday.
The report comes 16 months after police arrested Gray, 25, for fleeing
unprovoked in a high-crime area. He suffered a neck injury in a police
wagon while shackled and handcuffed, and died a week later.
The incident triggered rioting and protests in Baltimore, a
majority-black city of about 620,000 people. It fueled a national debate
on police tactics and stoked the rise of the Black Lives Matter
movement.
Six officers were charged in Gray's death, but four trials ended without
a conviction. Prosecutors dropped the remaining charges last month.
The Justice Department's investigation after Gray's death found that the
Baltimore Police Department had routinely made unconstitutional stops,
searches and arrests.
"BPD’s targeted policing of certain Baltimore neighborhoods with minimal
oversight or accountability disproportionately harms African-American
residents," the report added.
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Angel Selah (L) and local artist PFK Boom gather to remember Freddie
Gray and all victims of police violence during a rally outside city
hall in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., July 27, 2016. REUTERS/Bryan
Woolston
The investigation found African-American pedestrians were stopped
three times as often as white residents after controlling for the
population of the area in which the stops occurred, the report said.
Police have also engaged in a pattern of using excessive force when
dealing with individuals with mental health disabilities, juveniles
and subjects who do not immediately respond to verbal commands, the
investigation found.
The department "uses overly aggressive tactics that unnecessarily
escalate encounters, increase tensions, and lead to unnecessary
force, and fails to de-escalate encounters when it would be
reasonable to do so," the report said.
Police in Baltimore also have frequently violated the First
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by detaining and arresting
individuals who engaged in protected speech, the report said.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson, Julia Harte and Brendan O'Brien; Editing
by Tom Brown, Sandra Maler and Gareth Jones)
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