A look at police use-of-force cases before Freddie Gray
BALTIMORE (AP) — The widespread unrest that broke out in Baltimore on the day of Freddie Gray's funeral on April 27, 2015, has been attributed to a host of factors, including decades of dysfunction in the city's institutions, neighborhoods and leadership.
No criminal charges have been filed in Garner's death, which was captured on cellphone video by an onlooker, but a federal probe continues.
Garner's dying refrain, "I can't breathe", became a rallying cry that helped galvanize a national movement on police treatment of minorities.
Loehmann and his training officer, Frank Garmback, were captured on surveillance video as they responded to a 911 call about a man waving a gun and pointing it at people.
The 44-year-old black man was shot and killed on April 2, 2015, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by a white volunteer sheriff's deputy who says he mistook his handgun for a stun gun.