Baltimore cop charged with attempted murder in shooting of subdued burglary suspect

1Baltimore state attorney Marilyn Mosby, seen here speaking on violence in Baltimore, Maryland in this May 1, 2015 file photo, announced the charges against Officer Wesley Cagle in the attempted murder of a burglary suspect.
2BALTIMORE -- A Baltimore police officer who authorities say shot a burglary suspect in the groin at close range after he'd been subdued is being charged with attempted first- and second-degree murder, the city's top prosecutor announced Wednesday.
3State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby announced the charges against Officer Wesley Cagle on the same day that news emerged of a lawsuit against the police department claiming abuse in a separate case.
4That suit was filed on behalf of a client by the lawyer who also represents Freddie Gray's family.
5The latest problems to affect the troubled police department come just three-and-half months after six police officers were indicted in connection to the death of Gray, a 25-year-old black man who died a week after suffering a critical spinal injury in the back of a police transport van.
6Gray's death prompted near-daily protests in Baltimore, and served as a catalyst for the U.S. Department of Justice to launch an investigation into whether the department's officers routinely use excessive force and participate in illegal arrests.
7According to the statement of probable cause, Cagle and three other police officers responded to a report of a commercial burglary on Dec. 28, 2014.
8As the suspect -- Michael Johansen, who has also been charged -- tried to leave the building, two of the officers stopped him and told him to show his hands.
9When Johansen reached downward, the two officers fired their service weapons, striking Johansen multiple times and causing him to collapse on the floor.
10That's when Cagle approached Johansen with his gun drawn, the statement said.
11According to charging documents, Johansen asked the officers whether what they had fired at him had been bullets or beanbags.
12"No, a .40-calibre, you piece of s---," the documents quote Cagle as saying to Johansen before firing one shot, striking him in the groin.
13Johansen was transported to Johns Hopkins Hospital for treatment, and survived his injuries.
14No weapon was recovered from Johansen, Mosby said.
15The three other officers involved were cleared of any wrongdoing.
16In addition to the attempted-murder charges, Cagle faces charges of first- and second-degree assault and use of a handgun in a crime of violence.
17"No police officer, no police chief, likes to report that one of our own engaged in criminal misconduct," said Interim Commissioner Kevin Davis at the news conference Wednesday.
18"That's a punch in the gut. It doesn't make me feel very good at all. It doesn't make police officers feel very good. But what's important here is that the integrity of our profession and the integrity of our agency wins out."
19According to police, Cagle is a 14-year veteran of the department, assigned to the Eastern District.
20Cagle was placed on routine administrative leave following the incident in December of 2014 and in early January, his police powers were suspended.
21As of Wednesday, Cagle had been suspended without pay.
22When asked if firing one shot at a suspect's groin warranted an attempted-murder charge, Mosby said she would "let justice run its course."
23"It will be up to a judge and a jury to determine."
24Last week, 24-year-old Cierra Brooks filed a lawsuit against the Baltimore Police Department alleging that while she was waiting for a ride outside a nightclub on Aug. 21, 2012, a police officer threw her to the ground and dragged her through the street, causing head and facial injuries.
25The lawsuit alleges that the officer then tossed her inside a police van and handcuffed her but did not put a seatbelt on her.
26As a result, the suit alleges, Brooks "was thrown about and injured as the wagon was driven."
27The suit says Brooks was taken to a hospital for treatment and detained for several hours without being notified of any charges against her.
28It also says that Brooks was released without charging papers and later received a letter from the police department informing her that all records of her arrest had been expunged.
29The lawsuit was first reported Wednesday by the Daily Record.
30Representing Brooks is Billy Murphy, who also is representing Gray's family.
31The police department did not return an email seeking comment on Wednesday.