Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake's decision to pay Freddie Gray's
family a $6.4 million civil settlement drew praise and criticism
Tuesday, with some Baltimore leaders saying the move will help heal the
city and others calling it premature.
Former Mayor Kurt L. Schmoke
said the settlement — expected to be approved Wednesday by the city's
spending panel — was a "very positive development for the city."
"The
mayor and her staff are trying to do all they can to heal the wounds in
the community, and this is a step in the right direction," said
Schmoke, president of the University of Baltimore. "This settlement will
give some people in the community at least some sense of justice."
Del. Curt Anderson, a Baltimore Democrat, rejected the idea that the
settlement could help bring peace to the city. Baltimore will be calm
when there is "justice for Freddie Gray," he said. That means "trials,
well reported, well attended, and decisions that were well reasoned as a
result. I am not seeing any signs out there saying, 'Freddie Gray's
family needs a payday.' I see signs that say, 'Justice for Freddie
Gray.'"
Anderson said that he's not opposed to Gray's family being
compensated, but that it's too early to know what amount is
appropriate. "I am not sure how much time the city law department has
had to look at the strengths and weaknesses of the case against the city
when no case has even been filed," he said.
Under the proposed
settlement, the city is accepting all civil liability in the April
arrest and death of the 25-year-old Gray, who suffered a spinal injury
while in police custody. The city does not acknowledge any wrongdoing by
police, according to a statement from Rawlings-Blake.
"The
proposed settlement agreement going before the Board of Estimates
should not be interpreted as a judgment on the guilt or innocence of the
officers facing trial," her statement said. "This settlement is being
proposed solely because it is in the best interest of the city, and
avoids costly and protracted litigation that would only make it more
difficult for our city to heal and potentially cost taxpayers many
millions more in damages."
The Gray settlement exceeds the
combined total of more than 120 other lawsuits brought against Baltimore
police for alleged brutality and misconduct since 2011. State law
generally caps such payments, but local officials can authorize larger
awards.
The mayor's office declined to answer questions about the
settlement, including why it was brought to the spending panel before
any civil lawsuit was filed and how the payment amount was reached.
Gray's death triggered days of massive protests across Baltimore, and
in the hours after his funeral, the city erupted into rioting, arson
and looting. The National Guard was called in to help restore order, and
a citywide curfew was put in place.
Six officers involved in
Gray's arrest and transport in a police van have been charged with
crimes ranging from murder to assault; all have pleaded not guilty. At a
pretrial hearing Thursday, a judge is scheduled to hear arguments on
whether to move the cases out of Baltimore; defense attorneys say the
officers cannot get a fair trial here because of the publicity
surrounding the case.
William H. "Billy" Murphy Jr., the lawyer
representing Gray's family, declined to comment on the settlement. A
spokeswoman for Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby also had no
comment.
A claim for compensation was brought by Gray's estate, including Freddie
Carlos Gray Sr. and Gloria Darden. Under the proposed agreement, the
city would pay $2.8 million during the current fiscal year and $3.6
million next year, the city said.
By entering into a settlement, the city would avoid a lawsuit that could have played out in public court filings and testimony.
Such city settlements usually include a clause stating that both sides cannot talk publicly about the case.
Little
discussion is expected today before the five-member Board of Estimates,
which is controlled by the mayor. City Council President Bernard C.
"Jack" Young and Comptroller Joan M. Pratt — the two independent votes
on the board — voiced support for the settlement. The other members —
George Nilson, the city solicitor, and Rudy Chow, the city's public
works director — are part of Rawlings-Blake's administration.
Pratt said the settlement will resolve the civil matter and eliminate litigation costs to the city.
"I realize there are different points of view about the settlement,
whether there should be a settlement, and the amount of the settlement,"
Pratt said in a statement.
"There
is no single solution that can resolve all the matters that our City
must address in considering the death of Mr. Gray and the impact of
recent events."
Young believes the settlement prevents a lengthy
legal proceeding and protects the city from a potential federal lawsuit,
where a payout wouldn't be subject to a state cap, spokesman Lester
Davis said.
"It was in the best interest of taxpayers of the city to work with the family to settle the case," Davis said.
Lt.
Gene Ryan, president of the police union, called the settlement a
"ridiculous reaction" by Rawlings-Blake and urged the Board of Estimates
to reject it.
"Just as Baltimore is returning to its pre-riot
normalcy, this news threatens to interrupt any progress made toward
restoring the relationship between the members of the Baltimore Police
Department and the Baltimore City government," Ryan said in a statement.
Police leaders also had concerns about the settlement.
"Claims
that are settled so quickly and for such a great deal of money are of a
concern for police chiefs and sheriffs because these events may have a
chilling effect on the work of officers who will perhaps feel that their
city or town does not support or value their work," said Karen Kruger,
an attorney with Funk & Bolton and general counsel to the Maryland
Chiefs of Police Association.
The settlement comes as
Rawlings-Blake faces a re-election challenge from several well-known
Democrats — a group that also showed a split in assessing the
settlement.
State Sen. Catherine E. Pugh said her biggest concern
was whether the settlement would have an impact on conducting trials
that are fair to both Gray's family and the officers involved.
City
Councilman Carl Stokes said the city should have waited for more
information before making a decision and should have been more
transparent about the decision to settle. Former Mayor Sheila Dixon said
reaching the settlement was a "smart decision" that will help Gray's
family "move on with their lives so they can put this behind them."
A
multimillion-dollar wrongful-death settlement is rare in Baltimore.
Only six payouts since 2011 exceeded $200,000 in the more than 120
police brutality-related claims. In all of those payouts, settlements
came months or years after legal wrangling in court battles.
For
example, the city paid $175,000 in mid-April to the estate of a man who
was shot and killed by police. Michael Omar Wudtee, a 38-year-old
Randallstown man, died in 2012 after being shot by police. His estate
had sought $10 million in his death.
The state caps the amount of money that people injured by police can
collect in civil lawsuits, but government officials can negotiate higher
payments. In April, Gov. Larry Hogan signed legislation that increases
the amount plaintiffs can generally receive, from $200,000 to $400,000.
That's the first time the state cap was increased in nearly 30 years.
In
a closely watched case earlier this year, Maryland's highest court
upheld the cap, rejecting an $11.5 million payment awarded by a jury to
the family of a Prince George's County man fatally shot by police. The
Court of Appeals ruling in March cut the amount the county had to pay
the family to $400,000.
Rawlings-Blake
said at the time that a ruling in favor of that family could force
local governments to pay out millions of dollars more when officers are
sued for alleged civil rights violations.
The cap has potentially saved Baltimore taxpayers millions of dollars in recent years.
A
Baltimore Sun investigation revealed last fall that the city spent $5.7
million in 102 court judgments and settlements for alleged police
misconduct since 2011; since then, it has paid more than $600,000.The
investigation showed that city residents — including a pregnant woman
and an 87-year-old grandmother — received battered faces, broken bones
and other injuries during questionable arrests.
The Gray settlement is similar to one reached by the family of Eric Garner and New York City in July.
The
city agreed to pay $5.9 million to the family of Garner, who died in
July 2014 after a police officer used a chokehold to subdue him on a
Staten Island sidewalk. That case gained national attention after videos
circulated showing Garner — an unarmed black man — repeatedly shouting,
"I can't breathe!"
In Baltimore, other families who sued the city over deaths received lower payouts.
In
June, Baltimore officials agreed to pay $56,000 to settle a lawsuit
alleging that a police chase led to the death in 2012 of 22-year-old
Jordasha Rollins. The spending panel awarded the money to the family of
the young woman, who was a passenger in a vehicle struck by a car
fleeing from police, documents state.
The city paid $6 million
about a decade ago to a man who became paralyzed from the neck down as
the result of a police van ride. A jury had awarded Jeffrey Alston $39
million in the 2004 case, but the amount was reduced through a
settlement.
In another case, the state Court of Special Appeals
reduced a $7.4 million jury award to the family of Dondi Johnson Sr. to
$219,000. Johnson was paralyzed, and died two weeks later, after a 2005
police van ride that fractured his neck.
Bryan
A. Levitt, a Towson attorney who has represented plaintiffs in such
lawsuits, called the Gray settlement "a smart move socially" for the
city because his death became an "internationally high-profile case."
He
said Gray's in-custody death isn't as clear-cut as others like the one
in South Carolina where an officer shot an unarmed black man as he ran
away.
A. Dwight Pettit, a Baltimore defense attorney, called the
settlement a "great move on the part of the city." He said it saves
Gray's family the "hassle of litigation" that might not be resolved for
years.
Pettit said the settlement also could have bigger implications for the city.
"I've
always believed that when the city started to pay real money, instead
of money after caps, that we would see the issue of police brutality and
excessive force be remedied and solved very quickly," he said.
Gray's
family could have filed a lawsuit in federal court on the ground that
his constitutional rights were violated, Pettit said.
That would have avoided the state-imposed caps on payouts, but would have risked a more conservative jury pool.
Pettit said, "Trial is always a risk."
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