Dixon: It’s ‘wrong’ to bust 7-year-old boy

Mayor Sheila Dixon apologized at a news conference Friday to the parents of Gerard Mungo Jr., the 7-year-old boy who was sitting on a dirt bike Wednesday when police arrested him and hauled him away in handcuffs to fingerprint him.

“I want to let the parents know I am disheartened by this, and that I?m sorry,” Dixon said. “It is clear to me the arrest was wrong.”

“The officers on the scene should not have arrested the child,” she said.

In a rare acknowledgment, PoliceCommissioner Leonard Hamm, who attended the news conference, said that the arresting officer could have acted differently.

“He had other options,” Hamm said. He declined to elaborate on what the officer could have done.


Read more

Arrest draws outrage

Gerard cuffed, fingerprinted


City leaders were still fuming about the arrest that was first reported by The Examiner Thursday.

Marvin “Doc” Cheatham, president of the Baltimore Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said Friday the group?s members were outraged by the arrest. “It is inexcusable and angers us that we have a police force that feels this is what it means to protect and serve.”

Baltimore Del. Jill Carter said, “We?d be better off if the police were spending their time going after people who are harming our children.”

Hamm said the case against the child has been dropped. None of the officers involved have been suspended pending the investigation, Hamm said.

Hamm also said he did not know if the child was riding the bike at the time of his arrest.

“That?s a gray area,” he said.

Gerard and his mother, Lekisha Dinkins, who wept during an interview with The Examiner, disputed the police claims. Dinkins said her son was sitting on the bike, and she had the key in her house. Police officials initially said he was observed riding the bike by the arresting officer. Since the arrest, Dinkins said her first-grade son has had trouble sleeping after being detained at the EasternDistrict headquarters where he was questioned by police.

Dixon said she hoped the arrest would not strain the relationship between the police and the community.

[email protected]

Related Content