by Jack
Remember that smug prosecutor in Baltimore that quickly charged the police with wrong doing, despite there being no evidence and worse, false evidence?
It was argued at the time that she was persecuting the officers for the sake of votes and appeasement. (She’s an elected official) So, she tried in vain to ruin the careers of six totally innocent police officers.
The angry black mob loved her actions, but the police across the country, not so much.
Now it turns out that Prosecutor Mosby may have lied and used false evidence. All charges have been dropped after the first two cop trials ended in failure.
Fellow district attorney’s are saying she pursued a false narrative, that Gray was illegally arrest because the knife he had on him was perfectly legal. That was proven to be a lie, because he was carrying a switchblade…a spring loaded knife! Her deliberate lie only fueled the anger against the officers by the rioters and made the job of police much more difficult.
“(CNN)Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby is going from prosecutor to civil defendant in connection with the case of the death of Freddie Gray.
On Wednesday, Mosby announced that charges against three officers still facing trial were being dropped. Mosby gave only a statement, but had to leave without taking questions because five of the officers in the case have filed lawsuits against her.
Officers Garrett Miller, Edward Nero and William Porter as well as Sgt. Alicia White and Lt. Brian Rice are suing Mosby and Maj. Samuel Cogen of the Baltimore Sheriff’s Office. Cogen was the law enforcement officer who filed charging documents against the officers.
The lawsuits allege false arrest, false imprisonment, defamation or false light, and other assertions. They were filed in U.S. District Court in Maryland in 2015 in late April and early May around the time the officers were arrested.
An attorney for two of the officers said Wednesday that there were ulterior motives in charging the officers.
“Marilyn Mosby’s comments in her press conference today confirm that the charges brought against my clients, Sgt. Alicia White and Officer William Porter, as well as the other four officers, were politically motivated and not supported by evidence to establish probable cause,” Michael E. Glass said.
He said his client suffered “extensive pain and suffering.” Porter and White had been suspended without pay until Wednesday. They are now on desk duty after more than a year on leave.
Rice, the highest-ranking officer charged in the case, paints himself as minimally involved, according to court documents.
He was the first to make eye contact with Gray, the lawsuit concedes, but he was not involved in the arrest. When a crowd gathered around the police wagon where officers were attempting to place an “uncooperative” Gray, Rice “directed other officers to move the wagon approximately one block south in order to complete paperwork and otherwise effectuate Mr. Gray’s arrest.”
Gray “continued to yell and scream” and slam himself against the side of the van, causing the vehicle to shake, so officers removed Gray from the wagon and placed him in flex cuffs and leg shackles, according to the lawsuit. He was placed back in the van, where he again “began to bang the inside of the wagon.” That marked the end of Rice’s interaction with Gray, the lawsuit says.
“At no point during his interactions with Mr. Gray did Plaintiff Rice see any officers use excessive force, strike or tase Mr. Gray,” the lawsuit states.
Rice accuses Mosby of realizing the case would draw widespread media attention and speaking “in a divisive and inciting manner” while making false statements about him. Mosby’s remarks, Rice alleges, broke the state’s code of professional conduct, which forbids lawyers from making “an extrajudicial statement” they know will prejudice a court proceeding.
One of the false statements Mosby made, according to Rice’s case, was saying the (switchblade) knife Gray was arrested with was legal under Maryland law. Rice contests in his lawsuit that it was spring-assisted and therefore illegal, and says Mosby knew that. Mosby told Cogen to file the erroneous charges against Rice, the lawsuit states.
The lieutenant “lost his freedom and dignity and suffered physical and psychological harm from being arrested and detained without cause,” the suit says.
The litigants are asking for $75,000 per allegation, plus legal costs.
CNN legal analyst Paul Callan said it is very difficult to sue prosecutors, who have what is called absolute immunity. Mosby’s attorneys will argue she was acting within the scope of her job and is protected by such immunity.
In most cases against prosecutors, the defense files a motion to dismiss and the judges agree, Callan said. “Even lawyers are sometimes shocked at how difficult it is to hold prosecutors responsible for patently improper actions,” he said about prior cases.
But in some cases, the plaintiffs will argue that the prosecutor stepped out of his or her role and acted as law enforcement, who have qualified immunity.
Callan said he thinks the plaintiffs will argue that Mosby, an elected official, did become an investigator because of her belief that police were not properly pursuing the case and her desire to appease her political constituency.
Marilyn Mosby should be disbarred and stripped of the right to ever practice law again.
She didn’t use “false evidence” … she never had a case at all, which she really should have realized. Had she let things simmer awhile, she might have been able to build a case. But she’s a youngster … and she was never gonna get any help from the cops … and the citizens were in an uproar.
It worked out how it worked out, but none of this detracts from the fact that the police, charged with the task of getting Freddie from here to there alive … failed.
Libby, the big know-it-all, makes a fool of herself again. Try following what actually emerged in court and testimony, if you can maintain the attention required.
Your totally ideologue explanation is pointless, time worked in the officers favor and proved that they only did their job, however time will help prove Mosley to be bias, if not careless (hummm sound familiar ) for personial reasons.
Time and Justice proved Mosley’s fabrications of charges and her baseless case against those officers. “Time incarcerated” is what she deserves for trying to destroy the careers and the lives of those officers and that should help her age a bit. And you Libby need a “Time Out”
Liberals, Power hungry elected and cop haters, SIGH!
A police shooting story you will never read in the hyperbolic, race baiting lame stream national news media …
Jefferson Parish sheriff: Deputy one of ‘luckiest men in America’ when robbery suspect’s gun jams before he is killed
If the robber’s gun had jammed, why was it necessary to shoot him dead?
And that article reeks of victim blaming (his slimey social media persona is entirely beside the point). We know he was a robber. We know he was a scuzzzzz. He’s still entitled to be taken into custody and sent to trial, if at all possible.
If his gun did not work, he was not a threat, and should have been taken into custody … not shot dead. You and the cops seem to think that a scuzzz is not so entitled. You are wrong. And cops who think like that must get themselves into another line of work.
Pie that boys parents are to be commended.