While Mayor Catherine Pugh was in City Hall yesterday telling reporters that she hasn’t had time to follow the federal Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF) trial, observers a few blocks away packed a courtroom to hear closing arguments in the case that alleges rampant corruption in the Baltimore Police Department.

“One of the most startling police corruption scandals in a generation,” the New York Times had just declared it – a mainstream media validation for black residents who have been decrying police misconduct in Baltimore for decades.

Over eight days of testimony in the case of two of the GTTF members – Detectives Daniel Hersl and Marcus Taylor, who both face racketeering conspiracy, firearms and robbery charges – witnesses described craven and brutal behavior not just by those officers, but by a dozen others who remain employed by the department.

In the most horrific testimony, a Task Force member “murdered” a man, shooting him point-blank, according to his partner, Momodu Gondo. (The accused officer, Jemell Rayam, was cleared in the shooting, and the city later reached a $100,000 settlement with the family.)

Gondo said Deputy Commissioner Dean Palmere came to the scene and coached Rayam and other officers on how to cover it up – an explosive charge that Palmere, who announced his retirement the same day, has denied.

Every day brought new witness accounts of police behavior that made the scathing 2016 Justice Department report on the BPD seem almost tame by comparison.

Some examples from sworn testimony:

• Task Force members would roll up fast on groups of African-American men, popping their car doors open to see who would run, so they could chase, detain and search them.

• Officers would pull over “dope boy cars” on trumped up seat-belt or window-tint violations, carried toy guns to plant on people, jailed innocent people, entered homes without warrants, armed, while wearing their police vests and badges.

• During these home invasions, Task Force members (and sometimes civilians posing as police) robbed people of cash, drugs, expensive watches, whatever they could find.

“This was not a case about aggressive policing,” assistant U.S. attorney Derek Hines said, addressing the jury yesterday.

“This was a case about greed. Yes, profiling was another tactic,” he said, “but it was a tactic used for greed.”

Pugh and her new police commissioner, Darryl De Sousa, may downplay these allegations (a “very few bad apples that spoil the entire barrel,” De Sousa assured lawmakers in Annapolis last Friday), but others are highlighting the trial’s far-reaching significance

NAACP Legal Defense Fund Director Sherrilyn Ifill tweeted, “It has the potential to reframe our entire conversation about law enforcement and minority communities.”

Yesterday the prosecutors homed in on a narrow task: convicting Hersl and Taylor on a specific set of charges. (Their Task Force co-defendants – Rayam, Gondo, Wayne Jenkins, Maurice Ward, Evodio Hendrix and Thomas Allers – have already pleaded guilty.)

Hines told the jury, “This isn’t a case against all police. It’s a case against a group of criminals who happened to hide behind a badge.”

The attorney for Hersl, meanwhile, acknowledged that the 17-year veteran did take money in two instances.

“Look, after 17 years as a street cop, his conduct was wrong,” William Purpura told jurors. “He will be punished for his conduct. He should be punished for his conduct.” (Hersl elected not to take the stand in his defense.)

While the detective was guilty of theft, Purpura said, he did not participate in violence and wasn’t guilty of any federal crime.

Task Force member Jemell Rayam, in the most horrific account, “murdered” a man, shooting him point-blank, his partner Momodu Gondo testified.

The two detectives are charged with taking part in a racketeering enterprise, robbery and extortion, taking fraudulent overtime for hours not worked, and use of a firearm in a crime of violence. (Theft does not fall under the racketeering statute, nor is it a crime of violence.)

Victims on Trial

Whether the the prosecution succeeds remains to be seen as the case resumes today with Taylor’s defense, to be followed by jury deliberations.

After the judge’s highly technical 90 minutes of instructions to the jury, prosecutor Hines made his case via a long and fact-heavy Power Point presentation.

Describing the instances where the officers took as much as $200,000 from people, Hines strove to defend the victims, all of whom were black and many of whom had previous convictions for selling drugs. He said the officers believed no one would listen to drug dealers.

“You did,” he told jurors. “No man is above the law, and no man is beneath the law.”

The officers acted brazenly in the belief that no one would listen to drug dealers.

He recalled the July 2016 incident in which Rayam dragged Ronald Hamilton out of the car and robbed him of $3,400 while Hamilton was shopping for blinds with his wife. The officers went on to handcuff the couple and eventually take $100,000 from them.

“Why did the defense cross-examine Mr. Hamilton and ask him question after question after question to ask whether he was a drug dealer,” Hines said. “Does that matter?”

Defense attorney Purpura, addressing a jury that included seven white women, suggested that it did.

“The truth is, he was a drug dealer,” Purpura said with a shrug, acknowledging the defense may have gone “a little too hard” in its questioning, but reminding the jury of Hamilton’s $1.2 million in gambling losses.

Defense Strategy

Casting doubt on the victims, Purpura also sought to humanize Hersl, pointing frequently to his client who wore a dark suit and sat at a table facing jurors.

Pupura tried to poke holes in the prosecution case, pointing out that Hersl didn’t join the GTTF until mid-2016, six months before the conspiracy ended. He noted that despite the federal surveillance, there was no damning phone call or recording of Hersl.

But he relied most heavily on impugning the credibility of the prosecution witnesses.

“Once a snake, always a snake,” he said of Middle River bail bondsman Donald Stepp, who testified last week.

“What do all these witnesses have in common?” Purpura asked in one of his few high-tech flourishes yesterday.

Flashing on an overhead screen was a “Get Out of Jail Free” card.