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[h=4]Baltimore deals with devastation, nation with hard questions[/h]The governor of Maryland declared a state of emergency Monday after the streets of Baltimore erupted in violence after the funeral for an African-American man who died of injuries he sustained while in police custody.
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As the sun came up in Baltimore Tuesday morning, the damage left behind by violent riots could be clearly seen. Buildings were burned and stores were destroyed. Protests started over the death of a black man, Freddie Gray, in police custody. VPC
Volunteers clean up trash and shattered glass in front of a looted business in Baltimore on April 28, 2015.(Photo: Noah Scialom, EPA)
BALTIMORE -- Scattered protests and a massive cleanup were underway Tuesday as the city braced for whatever comes next after a long night of violence.
The governor and mayor promised increased security. And President Obama promised a thorough investigation into the death in police custody of Freddie Gray. Obama also said economic and cultural problems must be addressed to fully solve the problem of violence on streets here and across the nation.
Still, he stressed, that's no excuse for the violence.
"When individuals get crowbars and start opening doors to loot, they're not protesting," Obama said in response to a query at a White House news conference. "They're not making a statement. They are stealing. When they burn down a building they are committing arson. And they are destroying and undermining businesses and opportunities in their own communities."
In Baltimore, schools were closed, streets were quiet but wreckage was everywhere as a solemn Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake toured the destruction.
"We will not let these deplorable and cowardly acts of violence ruin our city," she tweeted. "I sincerely want to thank all those out there cleaning up streets and sharing their love for #OurCity. Thank you, Baltimore!"
Rawlings-Blake, who called the rioters "thugs," dismissed claims that she waited too long to send in a heavy police and National Guard presence. She cited a "delicate balancing act" between managing the problem and making it worse.
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USA TODAY's Rem Reider and Michael Wolff discuss the responsibility of the media when covering a polarizing story like the riots in Baltimore, Maryland. (USA NEWS, USA TODAY)
"It is very important that we respond to the situation as it is on the ground," she said. "There are always going to be armchair quarterbacks who have never sat in my seat."
Hours after Freddie Gray was laid to rest Monday, protests ostensibly against police violence quickly deteriorated into devastating riots. Roving bands of looters, some armed with crowbars, roamed the city, hurling rocks at police, destroying patrol cars, smashing store windows and torching buildings.
About 20 businesses and more than 140 cars burned as the mayhem spilled into Tuesday's early hours. From 1 a.m. to 5 a.m., the city's Office of Emergency Management reported 10 major blazes.
"Please allow members of the fire department to respond to their calls for service," the police tweeted at 2 a.m. "We are still hearing reports of them being assaulted."
Later Tuesday, residents swept glass and debris from battered sidewalks and streets while National Guard members stood sentry.
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan also toured parts of the city Tuesday. He said the violence began at about 3 p.m. Monday, but added that the National Guard did not enter the fray until asked by the mayor three hours later.
He said a "couple thousand" guard members and city police were patrolling the city, and that another 1,000 guard members would be in the city by Tuesday night.
USA TODAY
Baltimore erupts in protest: Monday's developments
USA TODAY
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"The vast majority of the peple in Baltimore who were protesting did so in a peaceful way, but unfortunately a smaller group of people acted out in a violent way," Hogan said. "What happened last night is not going to happen tonight."
More than 200 arrests were made and more than a dozen police officers were injured, Police Commissioner Anthony Batts said, adding that he believed tensions were easing. Still, authorities ordered 10 p.m. curfews for the rest of the week.
The Baltimore Orioles postponed games scheduled for Monday and Tuesday nights. Many businesses, wary of a resurgence of violence that had overwhelmed police and fire fighters, closed on Tuesday.
The list included Security Square Mall with more than 100 stores in western Baltimore. Many downtown businesses were closed, and mutual fund houses T. Rowe Price and Legg Mason announced that most employees were working from home.
Jamal Bryant, a local activist and pastor of Empowerment Temple, opened his church for teens with no place to go due to the school closures. He promised to conduct training on how to protest without destroying the city.
USA TODAY
Baltimore rioters target stores, beat photographer
Bryant tweeted: "We're also gonna take HS students to go clean up OUR neighborhoods. We must rise from the ashes. Meet at @EmpowermentTem2 at 10"
Batts said it appeared that a number of gangs met and decided that each group would "take out a police officer" after Monday's funeral of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man who died April 19 after suffering a severe spine injury in police custody.
Social media was alive with "#purge" before and during the mayhem, an apparent allusion to the film The Purge, which featured a 12-hour period in which all crime was legal.
Batts implored parents to take control of their children who might be taking part in the rioting. He said some of the 15 buildings that burned took great effort to erect in ailing communities that need them.
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