Closing arguments will be heard this morning in the trial of Officer Edward Nero, one of the six Baltimore City Police officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray.

Judge Barry Williams, who is deciding the case, has given each side 45 minutes to deliver their arguments.

Williams told lawyers that he will not be swayed by "emotions or theatrics" from lawyers as a jury might be, but he did say that given the nature of the case, he would expect attorneys to offer arguments as wells as points of fact on the law and the evidence in the closing arguments.

The judge has said he will be back in court on Monday to announce the verdict, noting he will take the weekend to review law and evidence in the case.

Nero is charged with assault, reckless endangerment, and two counts of misconduct in office, all misdemeanors.

Nero was one of the officers who arrested Freddie Gray.

Prosecutors have argued that the arrest of Gray on April 12, 2015, was legal, and any physical contact the officer had with Gray amounts to assault.  They also argue that by failing to pout Gray in a seat belt when he was loaded into a police transport van, that Nero contributed to Gray's injuries, and his death one week later.

The trial is in its sixth day.

Today's proceedings are scheduled to begin at 10 a.m.

After the defense rested its case on Wednesday, Judge Williams rejected a defense argument to drop the charges on the grounds of prosecutorial misconduct.

Nero's attorney Marc Zayon argued that prosecutors did not call Officer William Porter to the stand, even though he was ordered to testify.

Porter's attorneys' efforts to prevent his testimony went all the way to the Maryland Court of Appeals, the state's highest court.

That appeal delayed Nero's trial which was supposed to begin in February.

Assistant State's Attorney  Michael Schatzow told the judge that prosecutors didn't call Porter, because of a change in legal strategy.

Porter's own trial ended with a hung jury in December.  He faces a retrial in September.