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View Full Version : US:White Cop Caught on Camera Killing a Black Man, actually gets arrested for it



John Nada
9th April 2015, 19:10
A white police officer in North Charleston, S.C., was charged with murder Tuesday after shooting and killing a black man following a routine traffic stop over the weekend.

The decision to charge the officer, Michael Thomas Slager, came after graphic video footage emerged depicting Slager firing a volley of bullets into the back of Walter Scott, who was running away.

Officers rarely face criminal charges after shooting people, a fact that has played into nationwide protests over the past year over how the police use deadly force. Yet this case took a swift, unusual turn after a video shot by a bystander provided authorities with a decisive narrative that differed from Slager’s account.

“It wasn’t just based on the officers’ word anymore,” said Chris Stewart, an attorney for Scott’s family. “People were believing this story.”

Authorities on Tuesday also pointed to the video as a turning point in this case and apologized to the family for the shooting.

“When you’re wrong, you’re wrong,” North Charleston Mayor R. Keith Summey said at a news conference. “If you make a bad decision, don’t care if you’re behind the shield … you have to live with that decision.”

The Justice Department said Tuesday that the FBI would investigate the shooting along with the department’s Civil Rights division and the South Carolina U.S. Attorney’s Office.

“The Department of Justice will take appropriate action in light of the evidence and developments in the state case,” the department said in a statement.

Summey and the city’s chief of police announced at a news conference that Slager, 33, would be charged and arrested. Slager, who has been fired, was arrested by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, the agency investigating the shooting, and booked into the Charleston County jail shortly before 6 p.m. on Tuesday. He faces a possible death sentence or life in prison.

“It’s been a tragic day for many,” Eddie Driggers, the police chief, said at the news conference. “A tragic day for many.”

The shooting began with a routine traffic stop after 9:30 a.m. on Saturday morning. After Slager stopped a vehicle, he began chasing Walter Scott, 50, and fired his Taser, according to the incident report and city officials.

Footage of the shooting, first obtained by the New York Times and the Post and Courier newspaper, showed Scott fleeing from Slager across a tree-lined patch of grass. Slager fires a series of shots at Scott, who appears to be unarmed, striking Scott “multiple times in the back,” according to an affidavit filed Tuesday evening.

Slager told the dispatcher, “Shots fired and the subject is down, he took my Taser,” according to the portion of the report filled out by another officer who relayed what he heard.

The video shows Slager picking up an item and placing it near Scott, though it is unclear if this is the Taser or something else. Police later said that Scott was hit with the Taser at least once, because part of it was still attached to him when other officers arrived on the scene. But city officials said that Scott was clearly too far away to use a Taser if he did have it.

“I can tell you that as a result of that video and the bad decision made by our officer, he will be charged with murder,” Summey said at the news conference.

After Slager shot Scott, the officer handcuffed the man’s hands behind his back and he remained there. The police report says that “several officers” gave Scott first aid, but it does not state how long it took them to administer that aid.

This shooting comes after incidents in Ferguson, Mo., and New York, among other places, have drawn heavy scrutiny over confrontations that ended with black men dead. The unrest has continued into this year, as a shooting in Madison, Wis., was followed by lengthy protests.

North Charleston, the third-largest city in the state, has a different demographic breakdown than the rest of South Carolina. Two-thirds of South Carolina residents are white, while North Charleston has more black residents (47 percent) than white residents (41 percent), according to the U.S. Census.

But the city’s police force does not reflect that breakdown, as four out of five North Charleston officers last year were white, according to the Post and Courier. The city’s police department announced in February that it would obtain 115 body cameras for its officers after obtaining $275,000 in state funding.

Authorities stressed that the episode in South Carolina was not indicative of the city’s entire police force of 342 remaining officers, instead calling this a singular “bad decision” made by one officer.

“I think all of these police officers, men and women, are like my children,” Driggers said. “So you tell me how a father would react … I’ll let you answer that.”

Scott’s family praised the decision to charge Slager with the shooting and was “grateful” someone came forward with the video footage, an attorney said.

“They were sad,” Stewart, the family attorney, said in a telephone interview Tuesday evening from Scott’s mother’s home. “There is nothing that can bring their son and brother back, but they are relieved that charges were filed.”
br />Scott’s family members had gathered at the home on Tuesday evening, including Scott’s four children and three brothers. His family and attorneys held a brief news conference Tuesday night, saying that they planned to file a lawsuit against the city and police department.

“All we wanted was the truth, and through the process we’ve received the truth,” said Anthony Scott, Walter’s brother. “I don’t think that all police officers are bad cops, but there are some bad ones out there.”

Slager was initially represented by David Aylor, a local attorney, who in a statement provided to local media soon after the shooting said: “I believe once the community hears all the facts of this shooting, they’ll have a better understanding of the circumstances surrounding this investigation.”

But on Tuesday, shortly before Slager’s arrest was announced, Aylor told The Post that he is no longer representing the officer.

“I don’t have any involvement in that case moving forward,” he said. “No involvement.”

This was the 11th time an officer has shot someone in South Carolina so far this year, according to Thom Berry, a spokesman for the state Law Enforcement Division. Berry said that the investigation into this shooting is “still very much in progress,” so he declined to comment on details of how the agency obtained the video footage.

Although officers fatally shoot and kill hundreds of people each year, only a handful of cases result in the officer facing criminal charges. Video recordings of the fatal encounters are becoming pivotal factors in whether prosecutors and grand jurors bring charges, experts said.

“Video has changed everything because it provides documentation that was never available before,” said Philip M. Stinson, a criminologist at Bowling Green State University. “Now, everyday citizens, when they recognize there is a dispute, they start recording video with their smart phones.”

However, these recordings do not always result in officers being charged. Footage of a New York City police officer placing Eric Garner in a chokehold last summer provoked widespread outrage, but the grand jury decided not to indict the officer. That decision, like that of the Missouri grand jury that did not indict the white police officer who shot an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, sparked a national wave of protests aimed at the way African American men are treated by police.

Officials and activists in South Carolina said they were asking the community to keep calm in the wake of the video’s release and the decision to seek murder charges against him.

“We want to ask the community to remain calm,” Elder Johnson of National Action Network said Tuesday.Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2015/04/07/south-carolina-police-officer-will-be-charged-with-murder-after-shooting/ There's a video of it in there(very sad). Straight shot him in the back. Then, cuffs him when his clearly dead/dying. Also the pig drops what looks like the pig's taser by the body to make it look like the victim grabbed it from him. In the police report, the cop claimed the victim took his taser, and that CPR was performed right away; both aren't true.

cyu
9th April 2015, 22:43
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Throwdown ...also, you have to ensure the victim is Swiss cheese or he'll testify against you in court.

Just another symptom of the window-dressing democracy we have in this country. Capitalism has corrupted the entire system, and what is left is just a shell, about as human as a zombie is human. It looks like a human from far away, but upon closer inspection, you find out just how twisted it is ...then they kill you before you can blow the whistle.

G4b3n
9th April 2015, 23:19
The sad thing about u.s political culture is that you are not even allowed to oppose these state sponsored racist murders unless the evidence is as clear cut as this case (video shows the cop planting a taser, etc). But when you oppose these muders in all cases such as Michael Brown, you are heavily looked down upon.

John Nada
10th April 2015, 09:41
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Throwdown ...also, you have to ensure the victim is Swiss cheese or he'll testify against you in court.I wouldn't be surprised if the supposed "broken tail light" excuse for pulling him over was bullshit too. It's a common tactic to break the light beforehand to set someone up. Also why isn't the other pig at the scene being charged too, when he was right there when the murderer planted evidence?
The sad thing about u.s political culture is that you are not even allowed to oppose these state sponsored racist murders unless the evidence is as clear cut as this case (video shows the cop planting a taser, etc). But when you oppose these muders in all cases such as Michael Brown, you are heavily looked down upon.The US has the right to bear arms, to fight a tyrannical government. Funny thing is, if one were to exercise that right, the news would make it look like the oppressor was a saint, martyred by these "thugs" who were likely psychopaths on PCP.:rolleyes:

cyu
10th April 2015, 12:44
Half the time is spent meeting the quota so the mayor can look "tough on crime" (since getting rid of capitalism isn't an option, you can only enforce oppression) - the other half is spent covering up the malfeasance required to meet the quota (and covering up the coverups).

Cliff Paul
10th April 2015, 14:40
I think that despite the video the cop is going to walk. "What happened before the video took place" the defense is going to say (same shit they pulled during the Rodney King trial) and a white jury is going to buy that shit, hook-line-and-sinker.

G4b3n
10th April 2015, 17:03
I wouldn't be surprised if the supposed "broken tail light" excuse for pulling him over was bullshit too. It's a common tactic to break the light beforehand to set someone up. Also why isn't the other pig at the scene being charged too, when he was right there when the murderer planted evidence?The US has the right to bear arms, to fight a tyrannical government. Funny thing is, if one were to exercise that right, the news would make it look like the oppressor was a saint, martyred by these "thugs" who were likely psychopaths on PCP.:rolleyes:

Gun culture here in the U.S is extremely exclusive. It means for the white middle class only, or if you are working class, you better have bourgeois interests at heart. The second amendment is still as restricted as the founders intended it to be.

Antiochus
10th April 2015, 17:12
I doubt he will get away. White conservative men couldn't give a fuck if he shot this "thug" as they call him on yahoo! news. However, the conservative's rigid moral norms means they can't take any "corruption" (i.e planting of evidence). So they are trapped. On the one hand they want to give the cop a medal for "defending himself from this thug", but on the other they don't want to side with a 'corrupt cop'.

Brandon's Impotent Rage
10th April 2015, 20:14
The fact that we actually have this guy on camera shooting the guy in the back AND planting evidence means that this is the first killer cop case that even Fox News hasn't been able to spin.

Sea
11th April 2015, 11:14
I doubt he will get away. White conservative men couldn't give a fuck if he shot this "thug" as they call him on yahoo! news. However, the conservative's rigid moral norms means they can't take any "corruption" (i.e planting of evidence). So they are trapped. On the one hand they want to give the cop a medal for "defending himself from this thug", but on the other they don't want to side with a 'corrupt cop'.As someone who grew up around conservatives, that's not what their moral norms mean at all.

Rafiq
11th April 2015, 20:41
Conservatives value "noble lies", and even if you show them that all cops are "corrupt" in this manner, they won't care. I'm sure others who are familiar with conservatives knows that they're a bunch of dishonest, contemptible rodents and degenerates. They see themselves as being "free" from the constrains of reason and political correctness (not that these are synonymous), reserved for the elites of modernity. It reminds me of the prime example of how in Italy during the 1930's, the Protocols was mass distributed and the authorities were FULLY AWARE it was a fabrication, even publically admitting this! What was their justification for its endorsement? That "none the less... It is profoundly true". Their understanding of society doesn't stem from any traceable worldly grounding but eternal ideas that are necessary to sustain their identities. Hence "Death to the intellect! Long live death!" Reactionaries think with their ass, they are possessed like rabid dogs of the most vile pathologies to protect their sacred social bonds.

Then you have the exceptional bitter conservative patriarch who seeks to keep his wild beasts of children in check, albeit with tacit knowledge of its futility. And certainly, even these fine gentlemen can't help but be subdued by the temptations of what they perceive to be modernity once in a great while. The reactionary is *personally* the most morally contemptible, hypocritical scum-of-scum of society.

John Nada
11th April 2015, 20:48
Gun culture here in the U.S is extremely exclusive. It means for the white middle class only, or if you are working class, you better have bourgeois interests at heart. The second amendment is still as restricted as the founders intended it to be.This is true. Sarcasm doesn't come across that well over the internet.:embarrassment:.

And beside that whole, "in case of another King George III" argument, next one is "for a man to defend his property"(why do those rightist gun advocates always say "man"?) There's been cases where someone get's a no-knock warrant, and mistakes the 5-0 for robbers. Which usually doesn't end well.

Guess one could say,"Gun rights? Gun rights for who? Gun right for the rich!" to misquote Lenin.
think that despite the video the cop is going to walk. "What happened before the video took place" the defense is going to say (same shit they pulled during the Rodney King trial) and a white jury is going to buy that shit, hook-line-and-sinker.Here's the dash cam video: MYaYdaFFLoQWeird how he touches the rear lights. Hate to go into conspiracy mode, but breaking the brake lights/turn signal lights beforehand to get probable cause is an old dirty trick. An excuse for why his fingerprints are on it?

Honestly, if this cop walks than that will only reinforce the sham that is US "democracy."

revnoon
12th April 2015, 20:07
This is nothing new. It just growing number of people with phone cameras now are showing it. Where with out phone cameras cops in past would give BS story.

If there was no camera the cop would say the suspected was fighting me and grab my taser and tried to tase me and less than two feet away from me.

When the cop tells the court he or she got scared the courts dismiss all charges. This is how cops walk away in the US. You don't have to have gun or knife.

The laws in US are too corrupt. And that is how cops walk away from shooting giving BS report of I feel for my life to justified the shooting.

By planting the taser makes the cop more believable by saying he was fighting with me and grab my taser and I was scared he was going to tase me!! Than when I'm on the ground grab my gun and shoot me and kill me.

When all this subject from the beginning was trying to do is runaway from the cop not beet him up and cop tried to stop him and the subject was trying to fight the cop off to run away. It happens many time on cops.

Comrade Jacob
14th April 2015, 20:48
Even with undeniable proof this was a flat-out murder I am surprised he's been arrested.

cyu
14th April 2015, 22:16
It's no surprise the police are nothing like those that are policed. If it were a government by the people, then people would police themselves. Capitalism is government by the rich, so the police has to be kept in a class of their own. Capitalists can't expect the poor to keep themselves in check, to fight against their own interests, so they need an outside class to keep them in their place. Capitalists also wouldn't be so stupid as to do any policing themselves, because that would mean they put themselves at risk - always hire someone else to do the dying for you.

There's a reason you can't let neighborhoods decide for themselves who should and shouldn't be police - if that happened, next thing you know, they'd start coming up with and enforcing their own laws, and this fake democracy we've pulled over their eyes would fall apart.

ckaihatsu
15th April 2015, 03:42
Indiegogo removed ALL the fundraisers


Indiegogo took down all Officer Slager fundraisers from their platform!
https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.colorofchange.org/images/michael_slager_1K_250px_cross.png

Now urge the company to take the next step and change its policy. (http://act.colorofchange.org/sign/indiegogo_next/?t=2&akid=4286.872082.uN-Uqb)

Take Action

Dear Chris,

After 54,000 ColorOfChange members raised their voices, Indiegogo met our demand and took down all Officer Slager pages from their crowdfunding platform. In short: we won.

Quick wins like this are rare, but they happen when a community is able to come together at a moment's notice and put strategic pressure on a company or politician. Collectively, we tweeted @Indiegogo thousands of times and flooded their Facebook wall. Everywhere Indiegogo employees and executives looked, they saw our message: that they shouldn't enable Michael Slager to profit in the aftermath of murdering Walter Scott. And that they shouldn't perpetuate a toxic culture that roots for and supports illegal police conduct while criminalizing Black victims, and justifying their killings.

We’re currently in talks with Indiegogo and will be meeting CEO Slava Rubin soon to discuss the company’s policies. We want to ensure that the next time a hurtful and hateful fundraiser like this is started on their platform, that it’s taken down immediately without any hesitation or delay. That’s why we need you to speak up.

Tell Indiegogo to officially change its policy. No one should ever be able to use their platform to profit from such horrendous actions. (http://act.colorofchange.org/sign/indiegogo_next/?t=4&akid=4286.872082.uN-Uqb)

We’ll take your signatures and comments into the meeting with the CEO. We’ll bring the voices and power of the ColorOfChange community into the room with us. Add your name. (http://act.colorofchange.org/sign/indiegogo_next/?t=5&akid=4286.872082.uN-Uqb)

Thanks and peace,

—Arisha, Rashad, Matt, and Bhavik for the ColorOfChange team


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Cliff Paul
15th April 2015, 04:30
Here's the dash cam video

I think you underestimate the amount of evidence required to convict a police officer.

John Nada
15th April 2015, 05:04
I think you underestimate the amount of evidence required to convict a police officer.No, I don't. Shit there could be a confession and guilty plea, and still somehow walk. Followed by civil damages against the deceased's family for a scraped leg and getting blood on his pants, and backpay from the department.:glare:

cyu
15th April 2015, 13:36
One good thing about top-down pyramid structures, is that while those at the top are vulnerable to corruption and intimidation, that same corruption and intimidation can leverage the change you want across a large number of the rank-and-file, instead of affecting only one individual on the bottom.

Of course, idealists would think that a decent society shouldn't require corrupting people at the top to get justice at the bottom. In that case, it shouldn't be structured as a top-down pyramid in the first place. That's just put in place by the ruling class to make police departments easier to corrupt.

cyu
17th April 2015, 21:45
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-04-16/cop-sues-nypd-over-quotas-slams-racketeering-culture

it became clear that his supervisors only cared about two things: tickets and arrests.

I can tell my supervisors that I took three people to the hospital and I saved their lives. That the child that I helped deliver is healthy. I can tell them that. But that's not going to cut it.

he encountered an unwritten rule that officers are expected to bring in "20 and one."; That's 20 tickets and one arrest per month. it was tough to get anyone outside the department to believe him, because NYPD officials would always deny there were any quotas.

what happens when you start harassing innocent people because I have to come up with my 20?

Those tickets might look like productivity on paper. But they're not actually making anyone safer.

Polanco is suing the NYPD. He secretly recorded conversations in the Bronx. A sergeant said in the recording, "Next week, it could be 25 and 1. It could be 35 and 1. Until you decide you're going to quit this job and become a Pizza Hut delivery man, this is what you're going to be doing until then." 35 and 1 means 35 tickets and 1 arrest.

roses
22nd April 2015, 10:14
"routine traffic stop" comes close to an oxymoron.