Read the entire article and don't cherry pick statements. The impact of the various testimonies don't lead to clear conclusions. Regardless of what that witness (Taylor, a police detective) said, the same article said:
"(Dr.) Allan, an assistant medical examiner, has stood by her judgment that Gray's death was a homicide."
"Another defense witness, Donta Allen, who was transported with Gray in the van but separated from him by a metal partition, initially said on Thursday he remembered nothing about the ride.
On further questioning by prosecutors however, he said that when the van stopped at a Baltimore police station, he heard someone say they gave Gray "a run for his money" after he was found unconscious.
Police have said Allen told investigators Gray was thrashing around in the van. Allen recanted that statement in court, saying he never hear loud banging, adding he was high on heroin and Xanax when he gave his initial police report."
In several trials the police were found not guilty, or there was no verdict, a hung jury. Witnesses including police detectives and an arrested Donta Allen, gave conflicting testimonies at different times. Were the police covering up and was Donta Allen put under pressure by police or prosecutors? We don't know but they are legitimate and unanswered questions. One of these conclusions are possible, maybe both:
- The police were covering up a long-standing and illegal practice of handing out vigilante justice by giving 'rough rides' to people they arrest.
- The prosecutors over-reached.