Officer Caesar Goodson
Officer Caesar Goodson

The Baltimore police officer facing the most serious charges in connection with the death of Freddie Gray will not face criminal punishment. The decision led to renewed calls from the cityโ€™s police union to drop the cases against the other officers in the case, as well. 

Judge Barry Williams acquitted Officer Caesar Goodson of all charges he faced, including second degree depraved heart murder. The case was left to Williams after Goodson opted for a bench trial instead of a jury.

The verdict is a blow to Stateโ€™s Attorney Marilyn Mosby in the high-stakes case. Goodson became the second officer to be acquitted, following Edward Neroโ€™s trial last month. In three trials, Mosbyโ€™s office has yet to produce a conviction. Four more remain, but the calls for the state to rethink the case came swiftly.

In a statement, FOP Lodge 3 police union president Lt. Gene Ryan called on Mosby to drop โ€œher malicious prosecutionโ€ of the remaining four officers, calling it a โ€œtravesty to the tax paying citizens of Baltimore.โ€

Doubts were also raised about whether the case could be resolved in court from the social justice-focused Open Society Institute, which said the trials will โ€œdo nothing to prevent racially unjust and injurious arrests,โ€ and called on citizens to address the system of policing.

While some of the same undertones were present after Neroโ€™s case, the stakes were much higher in Goodsonโ€™s trial. He faced the stiffest charges, and other officers have pointed to police protocol that says the van driver is ultimately responsible for the safety of the passengers.

Another reason for the bigger question marks came straight from the judge. Williams delivered a scathing rebuke of the prosecutionโ€™s case. He listed at least five scenarios outlining possible times during the van ride when Gray may have been injured, and said the state did not prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt. He also says the state failed to define a rough ride, and essentially made a number of insinuations about the van ride that prosecutors failed to prove. Important to the future cases, he also found that police are not required to seatbelt detainees.

In an article on whether the case should continue from the Washington Post, former assistant stateโ€™s attorney Jeremy Eldridge said the case showed Mosbyโ€™s โ€œyouthful inexperience shining through.โ€

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

One reply on “Goodson Acquittal Leads to Questions About Remaining Police Trials”

  1. I’m glad this nightmare is over so you can move forward with a happy life. People need to realize being a police officer in any city is not easy.
    I’m thankful you proven innocent
    All the very best with yourself and family!!!

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