Investigating the Freddie Gray case
Frame grab from Kevin Moore’s April 12, 2015, cellphone video of Freddie Gray being loaded into a Baltimore police van during his arrest. At some point during his time in custody, Gray, 25, fell into a coma and died April 19 from injuries to his spinal cord sustained that day. A task force was created by Baltimore Police to investigate Gray’s arrest and his death.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Baltimore Sun
An inside look at the Baltimore police task force created by then-Commissioner Anthony Batts to investigate the arrest and death of Freddie Gray in West Baltimore. Read the full series: Looking for Answers.
Baltimore Detective Timothy Hamilton moves sophisticated image-gathering equipment into position to scan the area on Bruce Street, across from Gilmor Homes near Presbury Street, to create a 360-degree, high-resolution visual of the area.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Crime lab recording technician Thomas Wisner uses a $236,000 Leica ScanStation C10 laser imaging system to create 3D images of the Gilmor Homes in Baltimore. The scans were made of the streets, sidewalks and terrain of Freddie Gray’s chase by police and the route of the van that took him to the Western District police station.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Near Gilmor Homes, Baltimore Police detectives Timothy Hamilton (left) and Michael Boyd plan the route for the 3D scanner they are using to create 360-degree images of the area where police chased and arrested Freddie Gray, as well as the route of the van that took him to the Western District police station.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Baltimore Police Sgt. Lamar Howard leaves a flier at Prince of Peace Missionary Baptist Church, requesting any witnesses to come forward, while walking door-to-door on Lafayette Avenue between Druid Hill and Pennsylvania avenues as police look for additional witnesses in the Freddie Gray case.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Sgt. Lamar Howard goes door-to-door on North Mount Street trying to find witnesses in the Freddie Gray case.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Baltimore police Sgt. Lamar Howard asks a resident to open his door to hand him a flier as he and Detective Alexi A. Correa canvas door-to-door on Lafayette Avenue. The two were trying to find witnesses of Freddie Gray being taken into custody on April 12 and the subsequent van ride to the Western District police station.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Standing in front of a rowhouse door on Baker Street, Baltimore police Detective Alexi A. Correa is part of the task force created by then-Police Commissioner Anthony Batts to investigate the death of Freddie Gray from injuries he sustained April 12, while in police custody.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)At the corner of North Mount and Baker streets across from Gilmor Homes, Detective Alexi A. Correa (left) and Sgt. Lamar Howard approach a pedestrian while canvassing the area. The two, part of a task force created by then-Police Commissioner Anthony Batts, were trying to find additional witnesses along the route the van transporting Freddie Gray took on April 12.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Baltimore police investigators walk toward the locker room of the Western District police station as they serve a search warrant to seize the contents of Officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr.’s locker. Goodson, one of the six officers charged in the Freddie Gray case, was the driver of the van that transported Gray to the Western District station.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Baltimore police Detective Alexi A. Correa uses a bolt cutter to remove a padlock from Officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr.’s locker. Goodson was the driver of the van during the Freddie Gray arrest.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Bolt cutters are used by Baltimore police Detective Alexi A. Correa to get into the locker of Officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr. Goodson is one of six Baltimore police officers charged in Freddie Gray’s arrest and death.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Evidence is catalogued as Baltimore police Detective Alexi A. Correa returns an item to Officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr.’s locker at the Western District police station. Goodson, the driver of the van, faces the most serious charges of the six officers charged in Freddie Gray’s arrest and death.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)A Baltimore police crime lab technician photographs the contents of Officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr.’s locker at the Western District police station where he was assigned. Police investigating the arrest and death of Freddie Gray were granted a search warrant.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)A Baltimore police crime lab technician places a baton issued to Officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr. on a bench so it can be photographed. The locker of Goodson, one of the six officers charged in Freddie Gray’s arrest and death, was searched by members of the task force after they served a warrant at the Western District station.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Baltimore police Detective Carl Stambaugh removes possible evidence from the officers’ locker room at the Western District police station. Police served a search warrant to remove items from Officer Caesar R. Goodson Jr.’s locker. Goodson was the driver of the van and is one of six officers charged in the arrest and death of Freddie Gray.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)The home of the task force investigating the arrest and death of Freddie Gray is in the Professional Standards & Accountability Bureau of the Deputy Commissioner’s Office.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Baltimore police Maj. Stanley Brandford leads a meeting inside the Professional Standards & Accountability Bureau of the Deputy Commissioner’s Office, where police were investigating the arrest and death of Freddie Gray met.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)A 30-person task force, assembled by then-Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts, meets to discuss the Freddie Gray case.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)With the cellphone video of Freddie Gray playing on the wall, Dr. David L. Higgins watches as police move Gray to a police van during his arrest on April 12. An orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Higgins watched the video and a demonstration of the hold police used on Gray.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Robert Graham, with LiDAR USA, gathers gear as he prepares a vehicle with a GoLook video camera cluster. The system, which has seven HD cameras and lasers, is used to make 360-degree videos and scan the area. The camera was on loan to the Baltimore police task force investigating the death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray after he was arrested and taken into custody.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)A map of the Baltimore police van’s route is reflected on a vehicle windshield as crime lab recording technician Thomas Wisner walks past with camera in hand. Wisner had been documenting damage at the Rite Aid on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard while scanning the area with a mobile mapping system as he worked on the Freddie Gray case and the resulting unrest.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Thomas Wisner, a crime lab recording technician with Baltimore police, photographs a department vehicle equipped with a LiDAR mobile mapping system outside a CVS drug store on West Franklin Street damaged during the unrest April 27 after Freddie Gray’s funeral.
(Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun)Karl Merton Ferron has been a staff photographer at The Baltimore Sun since July 1984.