BALTIMORE (AP) - The Latest on an administrative police board that is hearing a disciplinary case against a Baltimore police officer (all times local):
2:15 p.m.
A board considering whether to discipline an officer at the wheel of a police van when a young, black arrestee was fatally injured will inspect the vehicle at Baltimore Police Department headquarters.
The department wants to fire Caesar Goodson for what it argues were violations of its policies in the handling of Freddie Gray after his arrest in 2015.
Goodson’s lawyer asked the board Wednesday to drop the case, saying an attorney for the department failed to submit exculpatory or mitigating evidence to a panel that charged Goodson. Neil Duke, the department’s lawyer, says the defense failed to identify any such evidence. The board rejected the request.
Duke rested his case Wednesday.
The board planned to view the van Wednesday afternoon before meeting Thursday to hear from defense witnesses.
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5:01 a.m.
Fellow police officers are testifying at a disciplinary hearing for the Baltimore police officer who drove the van in which a 25-year-old black man, Freddie Gray, suffered a fatal injury.
The hearing is expected to continue Wednesday for Officer Caesar Goodson.
The police department is seeking to fire Goodson for violating police policies during the ride in which Gray was injured after his arrest in April 2015. The department says Goodson failed to fasten Gray in a seatbelt and didn’t take him to a hospital when he requested care.
Officer Edward Nero testified Tuesday that Gray “was not showing any signs of a medical emergency” when he was first arrested and placed in the van.
The disciplinary hearing is expected to last into next week.
Goodson was acquitted of criminal charges last year.
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