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Baltimore in flames: senseless

The Baltimore Police Department apparently has a long history of abuses. That all needs to be addressed, but it doesn't justify rioting, looting, and actions that place the lives of others in danger.

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Patrick Semansky/AP
A man throws a brick at police following the funeral of Freddie Gray in Baltimore on Monday. Gray died from spinal injuries about a week after he was arrested and transported in a Baltimore Police Department van.

Just under 10 days ago, a 25-year-old man in Baltimore died after being taken into custody by police for reasons that still haven鈥檛 been made clear. What has been even less clear to date have been, which resulted from a broken neck and possibly other injuries that he sustained some time after being taken into custody but after he was out of the view of the cameras that recorded his initial encounter with police. There have been protests in Baltimore virtually from the day that Gray鈥檚 death became public and,聽,聽they became violent enough that fans who were at Camden Yards to watch the Orioles play the Red Sox were kept in their seats for some period of time while police dealt with violent protests outside the stadium. Today, Gray was laid to rest but tensions began to rise when rumors began to spread of plans for attacks on police officers by gang members and, this afternoon聽

BALTIMORE 鈥 Police officers in riot gear clashed with rock-throwing youths on Monday in a neighborhood in Northwest Baltimore, hours after Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old black man who has become the nation鈥檚 latest symbol of police brutality, was laid to rest amid emotional calls for justice and peace.

At least seven officers were injured and one was 鈥渦nresponsive,鈥 Capt. J. Eric Kowalczyk of the Baltimore police told reporters.

The violence broke out in the Mondawmin neighborhood, near the New Shiloh Baptist Church, where friends, neighbors, activists and government officials from the local level to the White House 鈥 as well as civil rights leaders like the Jesse Jackson and Dick Gregory 鈥 had gathered in the morning to eulogize Mr. Gray.

鈥淲e are continuing to deploy resources across the city to respond to reports of violence,鈥 the police said on Twitter. 鈥淭he safety of our community is our top priority.鈥

Groups of angry young people surrounded a police cruiser and smashed it in; another cruiser could be seen burning. Several businesses, including a drugstore, a liquor store and a check-cashing store, were looted. Others pelted the police with items picked up at nearby vacant lots 鈥 rocks, bricks, boards and chunks of concrete. Some arrests were made.

At least one small fire could be seen in streets filled with debris. Police officers in riot gear could also be seen outside Camden Yards, the baseball field in downtown Baltimore, where the Orioles were scheduled to play the Chicago White Sox. The Maryland State Police said that an additional 40 troopers were joining the 42 troopers already deployed in Baltimore.

Police said earlier in the day that they had received a 鈥渃redible threat鈥 of violence against law enforcement officers, and Captain Kowalczyk told reporters here that authorities would take 鈥渁ppropriate measures鈥 to keep officers and the neighborhood safe. Warned by the police of possible violence, the University of Maryland campus in downtown Baltimore closed early as did Mondawmin Mall.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to see tear gas, you鈥檙e going to see pepper balls, we鈥檙e going to use appropriate methods to make sure we an preserve the safety of that community,鈥 Captain Kowalczyk said during a televised news conference. 鈥淥ur officers are working as quickly and as orderly as they can to being about order in the area of Mondawmin.鈥

A flier circulated on social media called for a period of violence Monday afternoon to begin at the Mondawmin Mall and move downtown toward City Hall.

More from聽

Violence and looting overtook much of West Baltimore on Monday,聽seriously injuring several police officers聽and聽leaving a store聽and several vehicles in flames.

At least seven police officers were injured in a clash that聽began near Mondawmin Mall and spread toward downtown. One officer was unresponsive and others suffered broken bones, police spokesman Capt. Eric Kowalczyk said.

Smoke filled the air as police responded with shields and a tactical vehicle. Demonstrators pelted officers with rocks, bricks and bottles and assaulted a photojournalist, and officers fired back with tear gas and pepper balls.

Demonstrators set a police vehicle ablaze at North and Pennsylvania avenues. Nearby, they looted a聽CVS drug store, which store officials said had already closed, before it caught fire. Rioters cut the fire hose as firefighters battled the blaze.

The unrest spread toward downtown, with looting along Howard and Centre streets as afternoon turned to evening. Another group of people was destroying property around North and Fulton avenues, police said.

Kowalczyk called the demonstrators 鈥渓awless individuals with no regard for the safety of people that live in that community鈥 and said they would be identified and arrested.聽Police said via Twitter many of the rioters were juveniles and urged parents to bring their children home.

Gov. Larry Hogan聽signed an executive order declaring a state of emergency and activating the Maryland National Guard. He was set to speak聽at Maryland Emergency Management Agency headquarters at 8:30 p.m.

鈥淭oday鈥檚 looting and acts of violence in Baltimore will not be tolerated,鈥 he said in a statement. 鈥淚 strongly condemn the actions of the offenders who are engaged in direct attacks against innocent civilians, businesses and law enforcement officers. There is a significant difference between protesting and violence and those committing these acts will be prosecuted under the fullest extent of聽the law.鈥

Earlier Monday afternoon, the threat prompted police to urge downtown businesses and institutions to close, including the University of Maryland, Baltimore, Lexington Market,聽a city courthouse and聽businesses including T. Rowe Price聽and聽Venable LLP.

Two city recreation centers in West Baltimore, the聽Robert C. Marshall Recreation Center in Upton and聽Lillian Jones Recreation Center聽in Sandtown-Winchester, closed early. All Pratt Library branches closed early.

Public officials condemned the riots.

鈥淔or us to come out of the burial and into this, it鈥檚 absolutely inexcusable,鈥 said聽the Rev. Jamal H. Bryant, who hours earlier delivered Gray鈥檚 eulogy. 鈥淰iolence is not the answer for justice.鈥

Bryant said a group of men聽from the Nation of Islam planned to build a 鈥渉uman wall鈥 to stop the mob from coming downtown. 鈥淰iolence is not the answer,鈥 he said.

The incident stemmed from a flier that circulated widely among city school students via social media about a 鈥減urge鈥 to take place at 3 p.m., starting at Mondawmin Mall and ending downtown. Such memes have been known to circulate regularly among city school students, based on the聽film 鈥淭he Purge,鈥 about what would happen if all laws were suspended.

The flier included an image of聽protesters smashing the windshield of a police car Saturday聽during聽a march spurred by the death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old man who suffered a spinal cord injury聽earlier this month after being arrested by city police.

Kowalczyk would not speculate on whether the incident was related to Gray鈥檚 death.

While officials had expected additional protests on the same day Gray was mourned and buried, the scale of the unrest took them by surprise,聽U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings told CNN.

鈥淲e never expected anything like this,鈥 he said.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake activated the city鈥檚 emergency operation center just before 6 p.m. to coordinate response to the riots.

Police were preparing for rioting to make its way downtown, with officers in helmets and carrying shields stationed at Lexington Market and the Inner Harbor. Maryland State Police sent 40 troopers to the city, said Keiffer Mitchell, a top aide聽to Gov. Larry Hogan. Several other jurisdictions, including Baltimore and Howard counties, sent officers to assist.

All but one gate to Oriole Park at Camden Yards was closed, with a game set to begin at 7:05 p.m. But team聽officials postponed the game less than聽an hour before first pitch was scheduled.

As was the case during the riots that occurred in Ferguson, Mo., last August, it seems fairly clear that the rioting and violence that we are seeing in Baltimore today, and that we saw on Saturday night near Camden Yards, is largely the work of people using the protests as cover for their own nefarious goals. Some of the reports regarding the planned protests for today have suggested that the city鈥檚 gangs have actually banded together to use today鈥檚 protest as a cover to attack police officers, for example. More importantly, the community leaders who have been part of the peaceful protests that have been going on since Gray鈥檚 death on April 19, along with Gray鈥檚 family members, have been quick to denounce the violence and ask for it to come to an end. It likely won鈥檛, of course, and the fact that it has gotten out of hand so quickly likely means that law enforcement will find itself forced to use a heavy hand to restore order, something which may prove difficult to keep under control as we approach nightfall in Baltimore. More than likely, though, it will take more than one night to bring order to this situation.

There is, quite obviously, no excuse for violence and looting such as what we鈥檙e seeing unfold in Baltimore tonight, and the willful destruction of property is utterly senseless. One of the first businesses to be looted in this neighborhood, for example, was a CVS that one could tell even from the aerial shots being broadcast on CNN was a relatively new business, likely only a few years old at the most. Over the course of less than 20 minutes, one could see the entire store being trashed, windows busted out, and merchandise being carried out by people who obviously didn鈥檛 care very much what what happening to the neighborhood. Less than an hour later, that building was on fire, and when the fire department came out to try to put out the fire, with a CNN reporter standing right there, two people who had their faces covered came up and cut the firehouse鈥檚 connection to the hydrant. That鈥檚 just one example of what鈥檚 been happening in that city.

None of this is to excuse what happened to Freddie Gray, of course. Based on the information that has come out so far, it seems quite apparent that the officers involved in his arrest, all of whom are currently suspended, acted at the very least with reckless disregard for his life, and possibly worse. Additionally, the Baltimore Police Department itself apparently has聽that are no doubt fueling much of what we are seeing unfold now. All of that needs to be addressed. However, none of that justifies, rioting, looting, and actions that place the lives of others in danger. I suspect that the people in Baltimore who actually care about what happened to Freddie Gray, and actually care about their neighborhoods know this. Unfortunately, they are being overshadowed by a bunch of thugs right now.

Doug Mataconis appears on the Outside the Beltway blog at http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/.

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