surveillance video of a violent Baltimore arrest
A still from surveillance footage showing a Baltimore police officer assaulting a man on North Ave.

Baltimoreโ€™s mayor and police commissioner used a Friday afternoon announcement to invite federal authorities to review the police departmentโ€™s practices, including the handling of police brutality cases. According to the Baltimore Sun, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake and Police Commissioner Anthony Batts said they were open to having the U.S. Department of Justice conduct a civil rights investigation of the police force.

Police officials indicated the willingness to be investigated is part of an effort to show transparency in the wake of the Sunโ€™s massive investigation into the departmentโ€™s handling of police brutality lawsuits. The newspaper found that the police department has paid out $5.7 million in brutality cases over the last three years to people that were mostly cleared of wrongdoing. โ€œI didnโ€™t break it, but I will fix it,โ€ Batts said of the police forceโ€™s practices.

The announcement also came on the heels of a Thursday letter making a similar request from City Council President Bernard C. โ€œJackโ€ Youngโ€™s Thursday to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder.

The Justice Department recently opened a civil rights investigation in Ferguson, Missouri, in the wake of the Michael Brown shooting.

Stephen Babcock is the editor of Technical.ly Baltimore and an editor-at-large of Baltimore Fishbowl.