Tag: baltimore orioles
The Hurting City: A House Divided

The Hurting City: A House Divided

Unrest on the streets of Baltimore is a tale told over again in American history. The Civil War’s first blood was spilled there in a scene that foreshadowed the racial reckoning the nation witnessed this week.

Freddie Gray wasn’t planning to die that day in West Baltimore. Gray, 25, made eye contact with police officers, which became a fatal encounter in Sandtown, a place that time forgot, as a resident put it. Screaming in pain, the young black man got his spine crushed after getting arrested. He never made it home.

Gray’s death in police custody unleashed a torrent of rage and riots that had simmered for years, just under the surface. The Baltimore police are one big reason why. The department’s record of settling scores of brutality lawsuits and making up to 100,000 arrests a year is now becoming a conversation piece.

Back to 1861. Answering the call to arms, a Massachusetts regiment bound for Washington had the misfortune to march through Baltimore to change trains. The soldiers were ambushed by a mob throwing stones and glass. The harsh onslaught claimed casualties. Baltimore was crawling with Southern sympathizers, and President Abraham Lincoln held the city by Union garrison force. Baltimore earned a nickname, “Mobtown” in the 19th century.

Below the Mason-Dixon line, Baltimore is Southern at heart, with a line of African-American greats: Frederick Douglass escaped from slavery here. Thurgood Marshall grew up in West Baltimore and attended Frederick Douglass High School. Ragtime pianist Eubie Blake and singer Billie Holiday belong to its rich musical repertoire. Searing social critic W.E.B. Du Bois lived and taught there in the 1940s. But Jim Crow also lived there, not only in the Deep South. Marshall, the first black Supreme Court Justice, never forgot his hometown sting of segregation, calling Baltimore “Up South.”

When I arrived as a reporter, I looked for clues to the city: first, hundreds of homicides a year. (That number has gone way down.) The majority of residents are black, in a population of 640,000. They are deeply rooted; Baltimore had the nation’s largest community of free blacks before the Civil War.

Generations later, black families live in desperate conditions — concentrated in East or West Baltimore — with no way out of urban poverty. They have little to lose, a recipe for restless discontent — made worse if others feel they have nothing to gain by sharing resources. Even a new boys and girls club would be nice. Early in the 21st century, swaths of Baltimore feel more Mississippi Delta than a Northeastern city between Philadelphia and Washington.

Even without Jim Crow, Baltimore felt profoundly segregated, with a wealth of private schools, clubs, and recreation. When I went swimming in the city’s nicest public pool in Druid Hill Park, I was the only white person. The “trophy” neighborhoods and neglected neighborhoods are utterly apart, each with no idea how the other half lives. I saw a holiday party crossing over class and color lines happen once. Yet, sad to say, the whole city is a house divided.

Affluent enclaves were caught unawares by the alienation that exploded, with flashes of 1968. When Martin Luther King Jr., was murdered that April, riots broke out in Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles, among other cities. But for Baltimore, race-related violence was nothing new.

It was my job to cover the checkerboard neighborhoods, to know activists and causes. The friendly small-town feel cut across as a common denominator. I saw stark contrasts in community meetings in fancy Roland Park, bare-boned Remington and school-spirited Charles Village. So close, yet so far.

All lived in a pocket, preoccupied with a patch of Baltimore — be it Bolton Hill, Federal Hill, Park Heights. The city is less than the sum of its parts, the wise editor John Carroll told me. People say, I live in Hampden or Homeland (or any other name) before they say, I live in Baltimore.

Major League Baseball played out the divide with a silly game in an empty Camden Yards ballpark. What is the city without the people? The Baltimore Orioles had a home-run chance to help heal a hurting city by opening the high-class gates by the harbor.

The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra did exactly the right thing in open air. Conducted by Marin Alsop, the orchestra gave a free noon concert on the front porch of Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall. Yes, it’s high noon in Baltimore.

That way lies a path to reconciliation, out in the open, in black and white.

To find out more about Jamie Stiehm and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit Creators.com.

Baltimore Devolves Into Chaos, Violence, Looting

Baltimore Devolves Into Chaos, Violence, Looting

By Kevin Rector, Scott Dance, and Luke Broadwater, The Baltimore Sun (TNS)

BALTIMORE — After two weeks of tension over the death of Freddie Gray, Baltimore devolved into chaos Monday.

Roaming gangs clashed with police in the streets, seriously injuring officers, tearing open businesses and looting their stocks. Gov. Larry Hogan declared a state of emergency and called up the National Guard, and state police requested as many as 5,000 reinforcements from neighboring states.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake instituted a weeklong citywide curfew for all residents from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m., starting Tuesday, as rioters damaged neighborhood after neighborhood into Monday night.

Rawlings-Blake called those involved “thugs who only want to incite violence and destroy our city,” joining a chorus of other officials and residents — some of whom fought off rioters to defend their homes and businesses.

“Too many people have spent generations building up this city for it to be destroyed by thugs who, in a very senseless way, are trying to tear down what so many have fought for, tearing down businesses, tearing down or destroying property,” Rawlings-Blake said. “It’s idiotic to think that by destroying your city, you’re going to make life better for anybody.”

William M. Pallozzi, superintendent of the state police, said 1,500 police were in Baltimore on Monday night. In addition to police from out of state, as many as 5,000 National Guard soldiers could be deployed. Ministers also took to the streets in an effort to quell the violence, trying to intervene and praying for peace.

The events stood in stark contrast to earlier, more peaceful protests in the city following the in-custody death last week of Gray. The 25-year-old Baltimore resident died from spinal cord and other injuries sustained while in police custody. The case is still under investigation, and circumstances surrounding his death remain unclear.

The violence began hours after Gray’s funeral, despite standing pleas from his family for peaceful protests and a suspension of demonstrations Monday in deference to mourners.

“This is not what my family asked for. This is not justice. This is just people finding a way to steal stuff,” said Carron Morgan, an 18-year-old cousin of Gray. He attended earlier protests, often intervening in tense situations between police and protesters.

Morgan said Gray’s family and neighbors were not rioting. Instead, he said, “we’re going to be out tomorrow cleaning up, for sure.”

The riots spread fear through parts of the city, forcing cancellation of the Baltimore Orioles’ scheduled home game and prompting the closure of city public schools Tuesday.

Late Monday, a massive fire involving a building under construction erupted in East Baltimore, which neighbors believe was linked to the violence. Terrance Taylor, 17, said he was “devastated” by the destruction.

“We are trying to build up this community,” he said, noting the neighborhood is already full of vacant buildings. “It’s a waste of millions of dollars. I don’t see how this is making a statement at all.”

The Fire Department had not been able to determine the cause of the blaze.

President Barack Obama called Rawlings-Blake and Hogan about efforts to restore peace, while newly sworn-in Attorney General Loretta Lynch condemned the “senseless acts of violence” for causing “a shattering of the peace in the city of Baltimore.”

The violence began around 3 p.m. at Mondawmin Mall as schools let out, with rock-throwing kids confronting shield-carrying police officers. Things rapidly deteriorated as police retreated to a perimeter position, vehicles and buildings were burned and openly defiant crowds began smashing into and looting local businesses.

Some casually loaded vehicles full of merchandise from neighborhood stores as police responded to hot spots in other areas.

At least 15 police officers were injured — two hospitalized — in violent clashes, with one police spokesman calling those responsible “outrageous criminals.”

Capt. Eric Kowalczyk, the spokesman, simmered with frustration as he recounted officers at one point facing a hail of rocks as they sought to bring the situation under control. “A group of outrageous criminals attacked our officers,” Kowalczyk said.

As of Monday evening, police had made 27 arrests.

Councilman Brandon Scott called on adults in the city to bring Baltimore back to order, to help it avoid a repeat of the riots that left Baltimore burning after Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination in 1968.

“I’m pissed off. This is the city that I love. We can cannot stand idle and let cowards ruin our city. If you are an adult and you are out there participating in this, you are ruining the future for these young people,” Scott said. “We cannot let this be a repeat of 1968. The neighborhood they’re in right now is still burned down from 1968.”

Scenes reminiscent of major riots in large American cities decades ago — including in Baltimore — as well as violent confrontations between police and protesters more recently in Ferguson, Mo., were captured by helicopter news crews and broadcast across the world.

City Council President Bernard C. “Jack” Young said the rioters were only hurting their own city.

“I am asking all of you out there looting to stop it. Please stop it. It’s hurting the city of Baltimore in more ways than one,” Young said. “When you loot the CVS store, that means that your relatives who work in those stores can’t go to work, so they can’t get paid. There’s a ripple effect. This has gone from being a protest to rioting. This is not the protesters. These are people rioting and destroying property and looting. We have to put an end to it.”

Continue reading

(The Baltimore Sun’s Yvonne Wenger, Liz Bowie, Pamela Wood, Justin Fenton, Erica L. Green, Colin Campbell, Timothy B. Wheeler, Carrie Wells, Natalie Sherman, Mark Puente, Ian Duncan, Meredith Cohn and Dan Rodricks contributed to this article.)(c)2015 The Baltimore Sun, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Photo: Baltimore firefighters battle a three-alarm fire at Gay and Chester Streets on Monday, April 27, 2015, in Baltimore. It was unclear whether it was related to ongoing riots. (Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun/TNS)

Longtime Baltimore leader Kweisi Mfume called the events a “growing pain” in a process toward “real structural change” in the Police Department, which has been criticized by protesters for a history of brutality against citizens.

The former congressman and NAACP leader said he and other men were walking the streets Monday night trying to connect with the young people causing trouble.

“There are a number of neighborhoods where men like myself — older, mature men — are in the streets, meeting with these young men, talking to them, telling them there is a better way, a different way,” Mfume said.

More than 1,000 protesters had gathered Saturday in the West Baltimore neighborhood where Gray was first arrested before they marched downtown. Those protests were largely peaceful, though the day was tarnished by isolated vandalism and looting, and a late-night clash between police and protesters.

Monday’s violent acts followed the distribution of a flier on social media calling for high schoolers to “purge,” a reference to a movie in which all laws are suspended for a day.

Police also announced that officers had received a “credible threat” that multiple gangs in the city had formed a partnership to target police.

It was unclear how many people were involved in the riots, which popped up in spurts.

Dozens of people broke into Mondawmin Mall, some arriving in vehicles and driving off with armfuls of clothing and boxes of store goods.

Portions of the Metro system were shut down, and streets were closed as police set up perimeters around neighborhoods.

Many major employers and downtown attractions closed early Monday afternoon, and some planned to stay closed Tuesday, including T. Rowe Price’s office tower on Pratt Street. Other employers decided to wait to see what morning would bring before deciding whether to open.

A CVS on Pennsylvania Avenue was looted and burned by a fire that billowed thick smoke into the air. A Save-a-Lot in Bolton Hill was vandalized, and residents in the neighborhood were left to fend for themselves as police diverted resources to Mondawmin.

Looting spread along Howard and Centre streets as afternoon turned to evening. Another group of people destroyed property around North and Fulton avenues, police said, and a car was set on fire at North Avenue and Pulaski Street.

About five stores in the 600 block of Eutaw Street had broken windows and were looted after rioters came through about 4 p.m., witnesses there said.

Kowalczyk said crowds “violently and without provocation” began attacking officers early in the day, and there were few signs of the violence ebbing as the evening wore on.

Kowalczyk said the department “will find the people that are responsible and we will put them in jail,” calling them “lawless individuals with no regard for the safety” of neighborhood residents and officers.

Hogan’s emergency order does not affect citizens’ rights but is required to activate the guard and authorize federal assistance, spokeswoman Erin Montgomery said.

The governor also promised repercussions for those responsible for the violence and looting. “There is a significant difference between protesting and violence, and those committing these acts will be prosecuted under the fullest extent of the law,” Hogan said.

(The Baltimore Sun’s Yvonne Wenger, Liz Bowie, Pamela Wood, Justin Fenton, Erica L. Green, Colin Campbell, Timothy B. Wheeler, Carrie Wells, Natalie Sherman, Mark Puente, Ian Duncan, Meredith Cohn and Dan Rodricks contributed to this article.)

(c)2015 The Baltimore Sun, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Photo: Baltimore firefighters battle a three-alarm fire at Gay and Chester Streets on Monday, April 27, 2015, in Baltimore. It was unclear whether it was related to ongoing riots. (Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun/TNS)