Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby told reporters Friday that her office's investigation, coupled with a medical examiner's determination that Freddie Gray's death was a homicide, led her to determine there is probable cause to file criminal charges.
Mosby said Friday that three Baltimore police officers illegally arrested Gray on April 12. She also said that a knife that Gray had was not illegal.
Six police officers have been charged in the death of Freddie Gray, Mosby said. Warrants have been issued.
"I heard your calls for no justice, no peace," said Mosby. She also firmly stated the manslaughter charges do not and should not damage the working relationship between police and prosecutors.
"Thank you for courage and sacrifice for the betterment of our communities," Mosby said to officers.
"This is your moment, let's ensure that we have peaceful and productive rallies that will develop structural and systemic changes for generations to come," Mosby said to the youth of Baltimore. "You're at the forefront of this cause, and as young people, our time is now."
Police officers charged
The Baltimore officers who face charges are Officer Caesar Goodson Jr., Officer William G. Porter, Lt. Brian W. Rice, Officer Edward M. Nero, Officer Garret E. Miller, and Sgt. Alicia White.
Officer Goodson is charged with second-degree depraved heart murder, which carries a possible sentence of 30 years. He also faces an involuntary manslaughter charge. Officers Goodson, Porter, Rice and White all face involuntary manslaughter charges, which carries a possible 10-year sentence.
All officers face second-degree assault charges -- a possible 10-year sentence -- along with misconduct in office (8th Amendment violation). All officers except for Sgt. White face false imprisonment charges.
Full list of charges against each officer can be found here.
Police statement raises more questions
The mystery of how the 25-year-old died has only grown more complex.
Police revealed Thursday a transport van carrying Gray made an additional stop after his arrest April 12. Deputy Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said the stop was recorded by a privately owned video camera, arousing suspicion among protesters who wondered why it was not previously mentioned.
The video belonged to shop owner Hwang Jung, who said police copied the footage. The original was lost when his store was subsequently looted, he said.
The new stop, Davis said, came between the first and second stops. Before it surfaced, police had spoken of three stops before arriving at the police precinct -- one to put leg irons on Gray, a second "to deal with Mr. Gray," and a third to pick up an additional prisoner.
That second stop remains under investigation.
Exactly when and how Gray suffered the injuries isn't known, publicly at least. Some have said it appeared to occur during his arrest, others have theorized it may have been the result of injuries suffered during his ride to the police station. Police have said only that Gray had not been properly fastened into the van, a violation of department policy.
Was it in the van?
Gray injuries may have occurred in the van, according to a report by CNN affiliate WJLA-TV in Washington. The police investigation did not find he died from injuries caused during his arrest, the station reported, citing "multiple law enforcement sources briefed on the police findings."
Instead, the station reported investigators believe Gray slammed into part of the police van, apparently breaking his neck. A head injury matches up to a bolt in the van, the station reported without mentioning how the injury may have happened.
An official in Maryland's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner wouldn't comment to CNN on the report, citing the ongoing investigation.
Was it during the arrest?
The account of a woman related to one of the six officers involved in Gray's arrest appeared to contradict the WJLA report.
She said that the officer believes Gray was injured during his arrest, although he does not know so for sure. She spoke to CNN on the condition of anonymity and said the officer didn't ask her to give the interview.
She is worried all six officers who encountered Gray during his arrest will be incriminated and punished when only two or three might be responsible.
"Six officers did not injure this man," she said. "Six officers didn't put him in the hospital."
Stoking suspicion
The revelations have further stoked distrust among protesters, according to Bryant, the Baltimore protest organizer and community leader.
Young people have told Bryant in the past two days that they are "absolutely frustrated and their confidence level is absolutely shattered" and that Thursday's news only exacerbated those feelings.
They are particularly suspicious of what police report about Gray's arrest.
CNN legal analyst Mel Robbins was also suspicious of the new revelation of the additional stop.
"They found out about it after doing this investigation where they interviewed over 30 people," she said. "So what that says to me is that if it's going to take a closed-circuit, private camera to show the stop, that they were not getting that information from the police officers during the investigation."
But Baltimore police Commissioner Anthony Batts told CNN's Chris Cuomo that people are jumping to conclusions and no one is trying to cover anything up.
"I think it's unfortunate that these little things are coming out. I think that it's inappropriate," he said.