Baltimore, MD - Apr. 28, 2016 - It was a day of reflection throughout Baltimore on Wednesday as many looked back on the one-year anniversary of the city's violence and unrest.The violence occurred in the wake of the police in-custody death of Freddie Gray.

Gray was arrested in west Baltimore on April 12, 2015. While in police custody, he suffered life-threatening injuries while being transported in a police van. Seven days later, Gray died at Shock Trauma.

After Gray's funeral on April 27, 2015, a crowd of young people gathered near Mondawmin Mall to protest his death. The protest lasted for 3 1/2 hours, spreading east and west in the city, and became known as the "unrest."

One year later, many people feel not much has changed. They gathered outside the CVS and Pennsylvania and North avenues, the one which was burned to the ground during the riots, to reflect.

"All of the feelings that were brought out on that day have not rested, I still feel the same," Baltimore resident Kira-Lynae Pindell said. "A lot of anger. A lot of frustration. Also a lot of sadness."

Those at that gathering also focused on another name: Tyrone West. Friends, family and supporters of West have gathered on Wednesdays since West died during a confrontation with city police in 2013.

Unlike in the Gray case, no officers were charged in that case. Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby says that, barring the emergence of new evidence, she will not reopen an investigation into that police-involved death.

Given that this "West Wednesday," as supporters called it, fell on the anniversary of the riots and unrest, the day had added significance in what they describe as their fight against the political system.

"A lot of what they do is to seek silence from victims and what they should really be seeking is justice for those victims," Qiara Butler, West's cousin, said.

Not far away from the CVS, Baltimore and state officials and community leaders held a Day of Reconciliation.

The event began at Mondawmin Mall at Reisterstown Road and Liberty Heights Avenue.

"As a city we were determined not to have the hours of unrest be the last word," Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said.

Among the other leaders to attend were Baltimore police Commissioner Kevin Davis and state Sen. Catherine Pugh, who on Tuesday won the Democratic primary for Baltimore mayor.

"One year ago, many of us stood here, I know I stood here actually with your station and asked if I could get on the mic and invite the mothers to come get their babies, fathers to come get their children," Pugh said. "Because at that same time, our school across the street, (Frederick Douglass High School), was letting out, and I wanted us to have peace in our streets.

"So I just felt compelled to be here today because I was here a year ago, more importantly, stood on the corner every day of the unrest and my message never changed about it, how this city needed to be more inclusive and how we didn't condone violence in any way, but we knew that there were problems that this city was facing and we could work on them together."

For those like Howard Norris, who was at Mondawmin Mall one year ago, the memories of the violence remain fresh.

"It just takes me back to that moment when I remember standing across the street and looking at all the kids running in the stores and just thinking why we doing that? That's not solving the problem," Norris said.

Rioting, looting and disturbances erupted at several locations in Baltimore. The intersection of North and Pennsylvania avenues was ground zero for most of the protesting and violence.