South Carolina Officer Is Charged With Murder In Black Man’s Death
WASHINGTON — A white
police officer in North Charleston, S.C., was charged with murder on Tuesday
after a video surfaced showing him shooting and
killing an apparently unarmed black man in the back while he ran away.
The officer, Michael T.
Slager, 33, had said he feared for his life because the man took his stun gun in a scuffle after a traffic stop on
Saturday. A video, however, shows the officer firing eight times as the man
fled.
The North Charleston mayor
announced the state charges at a news conference Tuesday evening.
The shooting comes on the
heels of high-profile incidents of police officers using lethal force in New
York, Cleveland, Ferguson, Mo., and elsewhere around the country. The deaths
have sparked a national debate over whether police are too quick to use force,
particularly in cases involving black men.
A White House task force
has recommended a host of changes to the nation’s police policies, and
President Obama dispatched Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., to cities
around the country to try to improve police relations with minority
neighborhoods.
North Charleston is the
state’s third-largest city with a population of about 100,000.
African-Americans make up about 47 percent of residents, and whites account for
about 37 percent.
The city police department
is about 80 percent white, according to data collected by the Justice
Department in 2007, the most recent period available.
“When you’re wrong, you’re
wrong,” Mayor Keith Summey said about the shooting during the news conference.
“And if you make a bad decision, don’t care if you’re behind the shield or just
a citizen on the street, you have to live by that decision.”
The shooting unfolded
after Officer Slager stopped a Mercedes-Benz with a broken taillight, according
to police reports.
The driver, Walter L.
Scott, 50, ran away, and Officer Slager chased him into a grassy lot that abuts
a muffler shop.
He fired his Taser, an
electronic stun gun, but it did not stop Mr. Scott, according to police
reports.
Moments after the
struggle, Officer Slager reported on his radio, “Shots fired and the subject is
down. He took my Taser,” according to police reports.
But the video, which was
taken by a bystander and provided to The New York Times by Mr. Scott’s lawyer,
presents a different account.
The video begins in the
vacant lot, apparently moments after Officer Slager fired his Taser. Wires,
which carry the electrical current from the stun gun, appear to be extending
from Mr. Scott’s body as the two men tussle and Mr. Scott turns to run.
Something — it is not
clear whether it is the stun gun — is either tossed or knocked to the ground
behind the two men and Officer Slager draws his gun, the video shows. When the
officer fires, Mr. Scott appears to be 15 to 20 feet away and fleeing. He falls
after the last of eight shots.
The officer then runs back
toward where the initial scuffle occurred and and picks something off the
ground. Moments later, he drops an object near Mr. Scott’s body, the video
shows.
The South Carolina Law
Enforcement Division, the state’s criminal investigative body, is investigating
the shooting. The F.B.I. and the Justice Department, which has opened a string
of civil rights
investigations into police
departments under Mr. Holder, is also investigating the shooting.
The Supreme Court has
held that an officer may use
deadly force against a fleeing suspect only when there is probable cause that
he “poses a significant threat of death or serious physical injury to the
officer or others.”
The officer served in the
Coast Guard before joining the force five years ago, his lawyer said. The
police chief of North Charleston did not return repeated calls. Because police
departments are not required to release data on how often officers use force,
it was not immediately clear how often police shootings occur in North
Charleston, a working-class community adjacent to the tourist destination of
Charleston.
Mr. Scott had been arrested
about 10 times, mostly for failing to pay child support or show up for court
hearings, according
to the Post and Courier,the local newspaper.
He was arrested in 1987 on
an assault and battery charge, and convicted in 1991 of possession of a
bludgeon, the newspaper reported.
Mr. Scott’s brother,
Anthony, said he believed Mr. Scott fled from police on Saturday because he
owed child support.
”He has four children, he
doesn’t have some type of big violent past or arrest record. He had a job, he
was engaged,” said Chris Stewart, a lawyer for Mr. Scott’s family. “He had back
child support and didn’t want to go to jail for back child support.”
Mr. Stewart said the
coroner told him that Mr. Scott was struck five times — three in the back, one
in the upper buttocks and one in the ear — with at least one bullet entering
his heart. It is not clear whether Mr. Scott was killed immediately. (The
coroner’s office declined to make the report available to the Times.)
Police reports say that
officers performed CPR and delivered first aid to Mr. Scott. The video shows
that for several minutes after the shooting, Mr. Scott remained face down with
his hands cuffed behind his back. A second officer arrives, puts on blue
medical gloves and attends to Mr. Scott, but is not shown performing CPR. As
sirens wail in the background, a third officer arrives later, apparently with a
medical kit, but also not seen performing CPR.
The debate over police use
of force has been propelled in part by videos like the one in South Carolina.
In January, prosecutors in
Albuquerque charged two police officers with murder for shooting
a homeless man in a
confrontation that was captured by an officer’s body camera.
Federal prosecutors are
investigating the
death of Eric Garner who died on
Staten Island last year after a police officer put him in a chokehold, an
incident that a bystander captured on video.
A
video taken in Cleveland shows
police shooting a 12-year-old boy, Tamir Rice, who was carrying a fake gun in a
park.
A White House policing
panel recommended that police departments put
more video cameras on their
officers.
Mr. Scott’s brother said
that his mother called him on Saturday, telling him that his brother had been
shot by a Taser after a traffic stop. “’You may need to go over there and see
what’s going on,” Anthony Scott said his mother told him. When he arrived,
officers told him that his brother was dead, but he said they had no
explanation for why. “This just doesn’t sound right,” he said in an interview.
“How do you lose your life at a traffic stop?”
Anthony Scott said he last
saw his brother three weeks ago at a family oyster roast. “We hadn’t hung out
like that in such a long time,” Mr. Scott said. “He kept on saying over and
over again how great it was.” At the roast, Mr. Scott got to do two of the
things he enjoyed most: tell jokes and dance. When one of Mr. Scott’s favorite
songs was played, he got excited. “He jumped up and said that’s my song and he
danced like never before,” he said.
South Carolina Officer Is Charged With Murder In Black Man’s Death
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