(CNN) From the day news got out that Freddie Gray had died, the purported goal of everyone involved -- from Gray's family to city officials, to the news media, to the people of Baltimore -- was to determine what happened to the 25-year-old man from the West Side.
Baltimore officers in Freddie Gray case
Six Baltimore police officers were charged in the April 2015 death of Freddie Gray, who died of a severe spinal-cord injury while in police custody. But there were no convictions in the case. Three of the officers were acquitted before
prosecutors dropped the charges against the remaining three in July 2016. Seen here is
Lt. Brian Rice, who was part of the bike patrol that arrested Gray. On July 18, 2016, Rice was found not guilty of involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment and misconduct in office in connection with Gray's arrest and death.
Officer
Caesar Goodson drove the van in which Gray was fatally injured. On June 23, Goodson
was found not guilty on all charges, including the most serious count of second-degree depraved-heart murder.
William Porter was the first of the six officers to face a trial. It
ended in a mistrial in December, and he had been scheduled to be retried before prosecutors dropped the charges against him. Porter was summoned by the van's driver to check on Gray during stops on the way to a police station. Prosecutors said Porter should have called a medic for Gray sooner than one was eventually called, and they said he also should have ensured that Gray was wearing a seat belt. Porter had been charged with involuntary manslaughter, second-degree assault, reckless endangerment and misconduct in office.
Edward Nero, one of three bike officers involved in the initial police encounter with Gray,
was found not guilty of all charges in May. He was accused of second-degree intentional assault, two counts of misconduct in office and reckless endangerment.
Garrett Miller was another one of the bike officers involved in Gray's arrest. He placed Gray in a restraining technique known as a "leg lace" before Gray was placed in the van, said Marilyn Mosby, the state's attorney for Baltimore. All charges were dropped against Miller, who had been indicted on charges of second-degree intentional assault, two counts of misconduct in office and reckless endangerment.
Sgt. Alicia White was present during one of the stops to check on Gray's condition. She and two other officers saw Gray unresponsive on the floor of the van, and when White spoke to Gray and he did not respond, she allegedly did nothing to help him, prosecutors said. All charges were dropped against White, who had been indicted on charges of involuntary manslaughter, second-degree negligent assault, misconduct in office and reckless endangerment.
But the truth has been difficult to pin down, and now answers to those questions will be in the hands of a 12-person jury to be selected beginning Monday.
What remains unanswered is how Gray suffered a fatal spinal cord injury while in police custody. He died in the hospital one week after his April 12 arrest.
Who was Freddie Gray?
An independent investigation by Baltimore Prosecutor Marilyn Mosby's office, along with the medical examiner's determination that Gray's death was a homicide, gave prosecutors what they needed to file criminal charges against six Baltimore police officers in May.
Each of the six officers charged in connection with the death of Gray is being tried separately. The first in court is Officer William G. Porter, who joined the force in 2012.
Porter is charged with one count of involuntary manslaughter, second-degree assault, misconduct in office and reckless endangerment.
One looming question: Can these officers get a fair and unbiased jury in a city rocked by protests and riots?
The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees a defendant's right to a fair trial and public trial proceedings.
Secrecy continues to surround the case, but the court has its reasons.
The gag order
On October 14, Judge Barry Williams banned prosecutors and the officers' defense attorneys from discussing the case outside their legal teams, saying, "There is a substantial likelihood that certain forms of publicity, such as extrajudicial statements by the parties involved in this case to members of the press or media, could impair the rights of the Defendant, the State and the public to a fair trial by jury."
Baltimore protests
People hold hands during a rally at Baltimore City Hall on Sunday, May 3. The death of Freddie Gray, who died in police custody, sparked rioting in Baltimore and protests
across the country.
Members of the National Guard board a truck at an armory staging area on May 3 in Baltimore. After a night of relatively peaceful protests,
the city lifted a curfew, the National Guard is preparing its exit and a mall that had been a flashpoint in the protests has been reopened.
Medics take a man away after police pepper-sprayed him on Saturday, May 2, in Baltimore's Sandtown neighborhood where Freddie Gray was arrested in April.
Police detain a man on May 2 in Baltimore's Sandtown neighborhood.
Protesters hold signs on May 2 in the Sandtown neighborhood.
Protesters march from the Gilmor Homes housing community, where Freddie Gray was arrested, to City Hall on Saturday, May 2, in Baltimore.
Police in riot gear enforce a 10 p.m. curfew and clear Baltimore streets of protesters and media on Friday, May 1.
U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Maryland, helps clear Baltimore streets of protesters on May 1.
Demonstrators celebrate the announcement that six officers were charged May 1 in Gray's death.
Demonstrators march through the streets of Baltimore after the charges against the officers were announced May 1.
Police on horseback block a Baltimore street on May 1.
A demonstrator celebrates in Baltimore the charges were announced on May 1.
A member of the National Guard stands outside Baltimore City Hall as protesters gather on Wednesday, April 29.
High school and college students march from Baltimore's Penn Station to City Hall on April 29.
A community organizer later identified as Joseph Kent paces in front of riot police with his hands up during a curfew in Baltimore on Tuesday, April 28. Moments later, he was seen being
arrested by police live on CNN. Kent's lawyer said on April 30 that his client had been released from jail. While some protesters defied the curfew and faced off with police, demonstrations Tuesday were largely peaceful.
State Sen. Catherine E. Pugh embraces a protester while urging the crowd to disperse ahead of the 10 p.m. curfew.
People attempt to stop protesters from approaching a police line on April 28.
A Baltimore police captain tries to calm a protester on April 28.
A band plays music during protests on April 28 in Baltimore.
A boy in Baltimore offers water to a police officer on April 28.
Jerrie Mckenny, left, and her sister Tia Sexton embrace as demonstrators hold hands and sing the hymn "Amazing Grace" in Baltimore on April 28.
Demonstrators stand in front of a police line and call for peace after a bottle was thrown on April 28.
Maryland National Guardsmen patrol the streets on April 28.
The remains of a senior center smolder on April 28. Riots broke out Monday, April 27, after
Freddie Gray's funeral.
Police retreat from burned-out cars in an intersection on Monday, April 27.
Firefighters respond to a burning building during the riots late April 27.
A police officer walks by a burning building on April 27.
Police stand guard on April 27.
Protesters climb on a destroyed Baltimore Police car in the street near the corner of Pennsylvania and North avenues on April 27.
A mixture of milk and water rolls down a man's chest after he was pepper sprayed by the Baltimore Police April 27.
A man rides a bicycle through heavy smoke emitting from a nearby store on fire April 27.
A man shouts for calm as protesters clash with police April 27.
Police carry an injured officer from the streets near Mondawmin Mall in Baltimore on April 27.
People carrying goods leave a CVS pharmacy near Pennsylvania and North avenues on April 27.
A demonstrator raises his fist as police stand in formation on April 27.
Armored cars drive down Pennsylvania Avenue as looters break into shops on April 27.
People lock arms and form a line opposing police at the corner of Pennsylvania and North avenues on April 27.
Police form a barrier between protesters and a burning CVS being attended to by firefighters on April 27.
People carry goods out of a CVS pharmacy on April 27.
A police vehicle burns April 27.
A police officer throws an object at protesters on April 27.
A man carries items from a store as police vehicles burn on April 27.
A police officer checks on a man who was injured on April 27.
A police officer is carried to safety after being hit in the head with a rock during the riot on April 27.
A police officer uses pepper spray on rioters on April 27.
Police officers push back a protester on April 27.
Police react during the riot on April 27.
Baltimore police officers in riot gear look toward protesters near Mondawmin Mall on April 27.
Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts chases away protesters in a parking lot on April 27.
A woman abandons her car in the middle of an intersection as Baltimore Police officers clash with protesters outside the Mondawmin Mall in Baltimore on April 27.
Police handle the protesters during a riot on April 27.
A demonstrator taunts police on April 27.
Protesters stand off with police during a march in honor of Gray in Baltimore on Saturday, April 25.
A protester throws a barricade at a bar near Oriole Park at Camden Yards after a rally on April 25.
Protesters chase after a car as it drives in reverse after the rally on April 25.
A protester breaks a store window after the rally in Baltimore on April 25.
Protesters get into a shoving match with police during a march downtown on April 25.
Protesters and police square off April 25.
Protesters drive through the Camden Yards area on April 25.
Members of the Baltimore Police Department stand guard Thursday, April 23, outside the department's Western District station during a protest.
A police officer films protesters from the steps of the Western District station on April 23.
Empowerment Temple Pastor Jamal Harrison Bryant speaks in front of City Hall in Baltimore on April 23.
Demonstrators put their fists in the air during a protest outside the Baltimore police's Western District station on Wednesday, April 22.
Hundreds of demonstrators march toward the Western District station on April 22.
People march through the streets of Baltimore on April 22.
Demonstrators argue with Baltimore officers during the protest on April 22.
A woman is comforted during the protest on April 22.
But before the court issued the gag order, CNN learned the defense's strategy will focus on what happened during a 40-minute ride in a police van when Gray was injured.
The defense told CNN it will contend Gray's death was tragic -- but an accident. Gray, though handcuffed and shackled, struggled to his knees and pitched forward when the van came to a stop, causing the injuries that killed him, the defense says.
"They're going to argue exactly that, this was a normal stop, or maybe he just fell down on his own while the vehicle was moving, or maybe it was a combination of forces of Mr. Gray falling down or losing his balance at the same time the vehicle was stopping," said Andrew Alperstein, a CNN legal analyst who is not involved in this case.
Baltimore approves $6.4 million settlement for Freddie Gray's family
Richard Waites, an attorney, psychologist and trial consultant based in Washington, said he's seen a trend of judges being guarded with how much information they allow the public to know before a trial begins.
He attributes the trend, at least in part, to communication technology, from text messaging to tweeting, that can disseminate information in seconds and potentially taint a jury pool.
"One of the things that I am seeing, not just in Baltimore but in other places, is an overuse of gag orders," Waites said. "The proper use of a gag order is to protect a party's rights of some kind. To protect information from going out to the public because it might cause problems -- I don't think that's a proper use of gag orders."
Was Freddie Gray's knife legal?
Acknowledging the public's right to know at the end of the gag order, Williams writes, "Nothing in this Order shall be construed to limit any rights of the media or the public."
Riding the bench
The gag order means journalists and the public can access only filed court motions, along with the proceedings in open court.
Freddie Gray case: Actions that led to charges against six
At pretrial hearings for the six police officers, some observers noted extensive bench conferences between the parties that can't be heard by those in the gallery. What is said remains a mystery, and although sidebars are considered on the record, written transcripts can't be currently reviewed by the public or media -- a move suggesting an attempt to strike a balance between preserving a fair trial for defendant Porter and the public's right to know.
Cameras are not allowed in Maryland criminal trial courts. In our modern age of electronic media, a large number of high-profile state trials permit journalists in the courtroom to transmit notes of the testimony to their readers or viewers as it happens via laptops or smartphones. But this is not the case in Maryland without the express permission of the presiding judge, and it won't be allowed in Porter's trial.
Reporters can take notes, of course, and later report, but they are barred from emailing or texting trial information in real time. The judge's motivation for this rule is unclear.
So can the trials be fair?
For all the precautions taken to restrict and control information related to the case, Porter's trial is still taking place only seven months after Baltimore was hit with violent rioting and looting following the death of Gray. Buildings were burned and a citywide curfew likely affected many in the jury pool.
Waites, who is not involved in the Porter trial, believes those in the community should still be able to be fair and impartial if selected for the jury.
"They won't remember the details of the police activity or the details of the arrest of Freddie Gray or the events that happened after that, when the van driver called for backup, which are the events that involve Mr. Porter," he said.
What we know about Freddie Gray's arrest
Additionally, Waites believes Porter will be able to get a fair trial because he predicts "a lot of the anger and active rage about what happened has sort of subsided a great deal."
Jurors won't be sequestered
As far as getting that fair jury, Waites says an extensive jury questionnaire would be the best way to learn about opinions that jurors have already formed and biases they hold based on their life experiences.
A recent defense motion states that jury selection, known as voir dire, has been extremely limited by Williams. At the final pretrial hearing in the case on Tuesday, nothing was said about a jury questionnaire.What was announced was that 75 to 80 potential jurors will be in the pool for jury selection, and they will not be sequestered despite a defense request.
Opinion: Why race is so hard to erase from jury selection
Jury selection also is a public proceeding in our nation's courtrooms.
In this case starting Monday, initial questions for potential jurors will take place in open court, but further individual interviews will be conducted in a conference room, on the record, but outside the earshot of anyone else.
Many high-profile trials have some individual juror questioning, inside the courtroom, so the public can hear jurors' answers, especially on issues of pretrial publicity -- how much a juror already knows about a case and why he or she can or cannot be fair. Other prospective jurors are kept in a separate room so they cannot become tainted by other jurors' answers. Sensitive issues with jurors are always discussed privately.
In these particular trials, where police officers are the defendants, Waites said the "perfect" juror for each side may have a role reversal.
Usually, he said, the state wants jurors that are law enforcement-oriented and "by the book." But here, that profile may be the ideal juror for the defense. Waites added not all police-oriented jurors may sympathize with these defendants, and attorneys will want to scrutinize people who are pro-law enforcement because some of these people "will hold these police officers to a higher standard, and very often other police officers will do that."
One type of prospective juror the court should be wary of, Waites said, is the juror who wants to become famous by being on such a high-profile jury. A book or television appearance can be very appealing to some people.
One way to weed out "stealth jurors," as they are called, according to Waites, is by looking at their social media profiles. They can give a wealth of information, he said. Nearly two-thirds of American adults, 65%, use social networking sites, according to Pew Research's October 2015 Social Media Usage Report.
Prospective jurors can go from wanting to be on the jury to not wanting to be on the jury, and some can actually be frightened that they could become targets in the community based on their decisions to convict or acquit, said Waites. This may or may not be a reason to be dismissed from jury selection.
Waites also said that picking a jury in Baltimore is driven by the judge, not the attorneys on either side. Williams, he said, is "going to want to do whatever he can to protect the defendant's rights during jury selection, so he will give the defense some leeway in their asking questions."
What if an impartial jury can't be selected?
If, during the course of jury selection, it is determined that a fair and impartial jury cannot be selected, the judge has several options, Waites said, including bringing in more potential jurors. A change of venue to another city in Maryland does not have to be the immediate decision.
On the other hand, while the Sixth Amendment guarantees a defendant's right to a jury of his peers, Porter can, up until jury selection begins, opt to forgo a jury and ask for a bench trial where Williams alone would be both judge and jury.
In the news: Conversations about race
Harvard University police said they were
investigating a possible hate crime at the law school after someone covered portraits of black faculty members in tape, according to university officials. Some photographs were defaced with strips of black tape and discovered on November 19. Take a look at other events that brought discussions of race relations and identity to the forefront in 2015.
Tim Wolfe, president of the University of Missouri,
resigned from his post on November 9, 2015, amid a controversy regarding race relations at the school. Wolfe and the rest of the school's administration had been accused of taking little to no action after several racial incidents on campus. A day before the resignation, black players on the school's football team said they would essentially
go on strike until Wolfe resigned or was fired.
In September, 14-year-old Ahmed Mohamed was arrested for making what appeared to be a bomb. The "bomb" was
actually a clock he had made on his own. "I built a clock to impress my teacher but when I showed it to her, she thought it was a threat to her," Ahmed said. Outrage over the incident lit up social media as #IStandWithAhmed started trending worldwide on Twitter. Ahmed got an invitation to the White House after the incident.
On July 23, the WWE terminated its contract with legendary wrestler
Hulk Hogan after the National Enquirer released a transcript of statements he made that included racial slurs. The remarks were recorded in an "unauthorized sex tape," according to the Enquirer, and included the N-word in reference to the dating life of his daughter, Brooke. Hogan apologized for the offensive language.
Officer Ray
Tensing fatally shot Samuel Dubose, 43, on July 19 after a struggle at a traffic stop over a missing license tag, Cincinnati police said. Dubose was driving away when Tensing shot him in the head, police said. Tensing said he
feared for his life. However, prosecutors said DuBose was not acting aggressively. The case quickly drew attention from "Black Lives Matter" protesters, who accused the white officer of using excessive force on Dubose, who was black. Tensing, who's been charged with murder and voluntary manslaughter, has pleaded not guilty.
Sandra Bland died at Waller County Jail in Texas on July 13, three days after being arrested for allegedly making an improper lane change. During the traffic stop, authorities say she was belligerent. Authorities say there was no foul play involved in her death. They say
Bland hanged herself with a trash bag from a metal barrier that separated the bathroom from the rest of her cell. Her family has said the idea that she committed suicide is unthinkable. Before her death, Bland spoke out frequently on social media about racism and police brutality.
After flying for 54 years on South Carolina's Capitol grounds, it took only a moment to
take down the Confederate flag on July 10, 2015. Years of deep-rooted controversy over the banner gained steam after the June massacre of nine black churchgoers in Charleston. "This flag, while an integral part of our past, does not represent the future of our great state," Gov. Nikki Haley said as she called for its removal.
In June, multiple fires at predominantly African-American churches in several Southern states were in the spotlight. The fires came in the wake of the massacre at the
Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, and raised speculation about arson and hate crimes.
PBS said on June 24 that it would postpone the third season of "Finding Your Roots" after an internal review that concluded actor Ben Affleck improperly influenced the show to omit the fact that
his ancestors owned slaves. The investigation stemmed from reports in April that Affleck had asked the show to edit out the fact that his family history involved slave ownership. Affleck admitted on Facebook to making the request soon after the controversy spilled into the public.
During an interview released on June 22, Obama
dropped the N-word. Obama used the word during an interview for the podcast "WTF with Marc Maron" to make the point that racism is still a problem in our society.
Nine people died when a gunman opened fire on a Bible study at
Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, on June 17. A law enforcement official said witnesses told authorities the gunman stood up and said he was there
"to shoot black people." Dylann Roof, 21, pleaded not guilty to 33 federal charges, including federal hate crime and firearms charges.
After Donald Trump
described some Mexicans who come to the United States illegally as "killers" and "rapists" in June, Univision, NBC and Macy's later
cut ties with the Republican presidential candidate.
Jorge Ramos, a prominent Univision host, called Trump's remarks "absurd" and "prejudiced." Trump has stood by his comments and continued his push for a crackdown on illegal immigration.
Rachel Dolezal stepped down as the head of the Spokane chapter of the NAACP on June 15 amid allegations she lied about her race. Dolezal, is white, but has said
she identifies as black. The idea someone might misrepresent themselves by claiming they were black, then earn a leadership position in one of the nation's top advocacy groups for African-Americans, stirred a social media firestorm when the news broke.
Edgar Antillon, co-owner of Rubbin' Buttz BBQ and Country Cafe in Milliken, Colorado, drew criticism for offering a "
White Appreciation Day" discount on June 11. What started as a joke about how there's no holiday that celebrates "the white community" was been misinterpreted as a racially charged promotion, Antillon said.
Officer Eric Casebolt resigned on June 9, days after a YouTube video showing his response to reports of fighting at a
McKinney, Texas, pool party sparked swift allegations of racism. Critics decried the white officer for cursing at several black teenagers, unholstering and waving his gun at boys and throwing a 14-year-old girl to the ground, his knees pressed down on her back. Casebolt's attorney said race had nothing to do with how the officer responded.
U.S. Rep. Loretta Sanchez apologized on May 17 for an ethnically touchy gaffe that was caught on cell phone video. Sanchez was ad-libbing at a California Democratic Party convention when she made a stereotypical Native American
"war cry.""I'm going to his office, thinkin' that I'm gonna go meet with woo-woo-woo-woo, right? 'Cause he said 'Indian-American,'" she said, using the gesture to try to discern between Indian-Americans -- with ancestry from India's subcontinent -- and Native Americans. Many in the audience at the Indian-American caucus reacted with silence.
Fury erupted in May over incoming Boston University sociology and African-American studies professor
Saida Grundy's tweets about white men, race and slavery. Her personal Twitter account was made private, but the Boston Globe reported some of the tweets: "why is white america so reluctant to identify white college males as a problem population?" and "every MLK week i commit myself to not spending a dime in white-owned businesses. and every year i find it nearly impossible." A few days after the debate went into overdrive, Grundy made a statement to the Boston Globe.
"I regret that my personal passion about issues surrounding these events led me to speak about them indelicately," she said.
Loretta Lynch was sworn in as the U.S. attorney general on April 27. The nomination of Lynch, the country's first African-American woman to serve in the role, was
held up more than five months over politicking in the Senate. Democrats claimed the voting delay was racially motivated, despite GOP protestations otherwise.
Freddie Gray died on April 19 after allegedly suffering a devastating spinal injury while in police custody. Six Baltimore police officers have been indicted on charges connected with the
African-American man's death. All have pleaded not guilty. Activists have claimed race played a role in Gray's arrest and the way officers
treated him. Protests and riots broke out in Baltimore on the day of Gray's funeral.
North Charleston police officer Michael Slager was fired from his job and then
charged with murder in the shooting of
50-year-old Walter Scott. Slager pulled over Scott on April 4, reportedly for a broken brake light. Scott was later shot in the back by Slager as he was running away. Scott was black and Slager is white. A bystander recorded the shooting, and the graphic footage sparked outrage and reignited a national conversation around race and policing. Slager's attorney has said that there was a violent struggle before the officer opened fire, that his client plans to plead not guilty and that race has nothing to do with the case. Prosecutors say Slager showed malice of forethought and "executed" Scott. The family of Scott and the city of North Charleston have reached a $6.5 million settlement.
While Mindy Kaling was working on her Fox sitcom, "The Mindy Project," her brother, Vijay Chokal-Ingam, admitted he
pretended to be black to get into medical school. The revelation came in April as Chokal-Ingam, who is of Indian descent, was pitching a book about his experiences as a "hard-partying college frat boy who discovered the seriousness and complexity of America's racial problems while posing as a black man."
On April 1, a noose was found hanging from a tree at Duke University. Social media pictures spread quickly, causing outrage on campus. Later that day, the Black Student Alliance hosted a march across campus. Hundreds of students of all races marched, chanting, "We are not afraid. We stand together."
In March, Starbucks received mix responses to its "Race Together" campaign. The company ran full-page ads in The New York Times and USA Today announcing the initiative. Starbucks held open forums for workers to talk about race, and baristas in cities where forums were held began writing the slogan on customers' cups, aiming to spark a dialogue.
Thousands of people marked the 50th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday" in Selma, Alabama. President Obama made a rousing speech on racial progress in a diverse country. "Our march is not yet finished. But we are getting closer," he said. The violent confrontation with police and state troops on the Edmund Pettus Bridge on March 7, 1965, marked a pivotal point in the Civil Rights Movement.
The University of Oklahoma severed ties with the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in March. A video anonymously sent to the school's newspaper on March 7 showed the fraternity chanting, "There will never be a ni**** SAE. You can hang him from a tree, but he can never sign with me." Two members who were leading the chant were expelled. "The song is horrific and does not at all reflect our values as an organization," said Blaine Ayers, executive director of SAE.
Uproar broke out when White Pride Radio put up a billboard reading, "It's NOT racist to love your people" in Harrison, Arkansas. Thomas Robb, the national director of Knights of the KKK, said there was no racist intent with the billboard. "If anybody sees racism in that billboard, then they themselves are racist,"
Robb told CNN in January.
Waites said this can have pros and cons. Porter and his attorneys will really have to look at Williams through the same filter they use to find that "ideal" juror, because although a judge's role is to be fair and impartial, the reality is "a judge is a person, too, and he is susceptible to the same influences that jurors are."
Williams summed up his belief in the residents of Baltimore County in his denial of the defense motion for change of venue.
"The issue then becomes whether the citizens of Baltimore are capable of listening to the facts as presented in the courtroom in coming to a decision based only on those facts and the law presented to them by the court. ... To automatically assume that the citizens of our city cannot provide the defendants with a fair and impartial trial would be quite a leap."
CNN's Miquel Marquez and Ralph Ellis contributed to this report.