A white police officer who shot and killed a black man after a traffic stop was charged with murder in North Charleston, S.C., on Tuesday.
The Post and Courier, a newspaper in Charleston, reports that officials played a video for reporters that showed Officer Michael Slager, 33, firing at 50-year-old Walter Scott as he fled, his back toward the officer.
The paper reports:
"Mayor Keith Summey added during a news conference that Slager's 'bad decision' prompted his arrest. "'When you're wrong, you're wrong,' Summey said. 'When you make a bad decision, don't care if you're behind the shield or a citizen on the street, you have to live with that decision.' "The footage, filmed by an anonymous bystander, shows the end of the confrontation between the two on Saturday after Scott, who had a warrant out for his arrest, ran from a traffic stop. It was the first piece of evidence that could contradict a statement that Slager released to the public through his attorney."
According to WCIV-TV in Charleston, Slager had said through his attorney that he believed he followed protocol during the incident.
"The shooting happened about 9:30 a.m. [Saturday] when Slager told investigators he pulled over Walter Scott for a broken tail light at the corner of Remount and Craig roads," WCIV-TV reprots. "According to an incident report, officers [heard] Slager say over the radio that he had deployed his Taser and 'seconds later' he said 'Shots fired and the subject is down. He took my Taser.'"
The Post and Courier has posted video of the incident here. We won't embed it because it is graphic, but here is a screenshot that shows the moment officer Slager began shooting:
Officer involved shootings have, of course, become national news lately, because of two high-profile cases that involved white police officers shooting black men. Both in the case of Michael Brown in Missouri and Eric Garner in New York grand juries declined to issue charges against the police officers.
The shooting deaths have ignited a debate over whether police officers have been too quick to use force.
The Post and Courier reports that at the time of his traffic stop, Scott had an outstanding Family Court warrant for his arrest. Scott, the paper reports, "had a history of arrests related to contempt of court charges for failing to pay child support. The only accusation of violence against Scott during his lifetime came through a 1987 assault and battery charge, but the disposition of that charge was not immediately known."
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