Baltimore judge finds officer not guilty in murder of Freddie Gray
On Thursday, Baltimore Judge Barry G. Williams ruled that officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr., who drove the police van carrying Freddie Gray when he apparently sustained a fatal injury to his spinal cord, was not guilty of second degree murder.
Goodson was also found not guilty on six other charges, including manslaughter, reckless endangerment, assault and misconduct in office.
The death of 25-year-old Gray, whose legs and hands were bound when he was placed in the back of the police van and who was not secured by a seatbelt, gained national attention and sparked protests in Baltimore.
Gray was arrested on April 12, 2015 for murky reasons. Police chased Gray after they made eye contact and he, apparently unprompted, ran. When they caught him they allegedly found what they say was an illegal switchblade, and what the State’s Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby said was a legally held folding knife. Gray remained in the backseat while the van made four stops over 45 minutes, during which Gray asked for medical attention and was denied. During the ride, he fell into a coma, and eventually died a week later.
Goodson was one of six officers to have been charged by the Mosby in connection to Gray’s death. He was charged with the most egregious crime, second-degree “depraved heart” murder.
Thursday’s trial was the third that the officers have faced. All three have now ended without convictions.