Freddie Gray death: Baltimore officer faces retrial after 1st jury deadlocked
William Porter's retrial on manslaughter charge set for June
A Baltimore police officer will face retrial on a manslaughter charge over the death of black detainee Freddie Gray starting on June 13, a Maryland judge ruled on Monday, after the officer's first trial ended in a deadlocked jury.
Judge Barry Williams set the trial date after meeting prosecutors and defense lawyers, the Maryland state courts office said in a statement.
Gray's death in April caused protests and rioting in the majority black city of 620,000 people and intensified a U.S. debate on police treatment of minorities.
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The date for the retrial of Officer William Porter, 26, in Baltimore City Circuit Court could snarl prosecutors' strategy to use him as a key witness against other officers in the high-profile trial, legal analysts said.
Porter, who is also black, was the first of six officers to be tried in connection with Gray's death from a broken neck sustained while in police custody.
A jury was unable to reach a decision last week and Williams declared a mistrial.
Porter faces charges of involuntary manslaughter, second-degree assault, reckless endangerment and misconduct in office.
The trial of van driver Officer Caesar Goodson, who faces the most serious charge of second-degree depraved heart murder, is set to begin on Jan. 6.
Prosecutors had hoped to convict Porter and use him as a witness against Goodson and Sgt. Alicia White. Porter testified he passed Gray's request for medical help to them but none was summoned.
David Jaros, a University of Baltimore associate law professor, said that Porter was a potentially major witness against Goodson and without him prosecutors "know that the case against Officer Goodson is significantly weakened."
Jim Cohen, a law professor at New York's Fordham University, said prosecutors were facing a major difficulty since Porter could want immunity from prosecution to testify.
But prosecutors had labelled Porter a liar, giving the defence a perfect tool to use against him as a witness, Cohen said.
"I think they've got a big problem, whether it [the retrial] is set for June of '16 or June of '18," he said.