Baltimore State Attorney Marilyn Mosby said Friday at a press conference that six Baltimore police officers involved in the arrest of Freddie Gray have been criminally charged. Her announcement drew cheers from from the crowd and renewed national focus that began only days ago on the youngest top prosecutor of any major city in America.
Mosby probably did not expect to be thrust into the national spotlight during her fourth month on the job. The 35-year-old is tasked with handling the case involving the controversial death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old black man who died after suffering a spinal cord injury in police custody. Gray’s death has inspired protests in Baltimore and nationwide.
On Thursday, the Baltimore police commissioner announced the department had handed confidential information on how Gray died over to prosecutors. The Justice Department is working on its own independent investigation.
Mosby did not return a call from NBC News requesting comment, but her office confirmed it had received the police department’s investigative file.
“To those who are angry, hurt, I urge you to channel energy peacefully,” she said on Friday. “I heard your call for ‘no justice, no peace.’ However your peace is severely needed. To officers, these accusations are not an indictment of entire force.”
Mosby is a Democrat who comes from a long line of police officers — but she has been vocal about holding cops accountable in the past.
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“She has a natural affinity for police officers and law enforcement types, and at the same time, she is aware of the incredible number of complaints against the Baltimore City police department,” said Richard Woods, a Baltimore-based attorney whose practice is primarily criminal defense work.
Woods has known Mosby for years and supported her in her campaign for state’s attorney. “It was important to have somebody who was willing to look at it from both sides, and Marilyn Mosby fit the bill.”
Her interest in the justice system stemmed from tragedy: When she was growing up in inner-city Boston, her 17-year-old cousin was mistaken for a drug dealer and killed outside her home by another 17-year-old.
The former insurance company attorney is leading an independent investigation of the officers involved in Gray’s death on April 19. She has not said when she might decide if she will pursue charges.
She has spoken out against police officers numerous times. During her campaign for state’s attorney, in response to a Baltimore Sun investigation of allegations of police beatings, she said: “Police brutality is completely inexcusable. I’m going to apply justice fairly, even to those who wear a badge.”
Mosby is a mother of two daughters who met her future husband while she was studying political science at the historically black Tuskegee University in Alabama. She was the first in her family to graduate from college, was raised by a single mother, and has law enforcement in her blood.








