A disabled black man murdered for picking up his child

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Ex-police chief scolds CNN for blaming Charlotte police shooting on victim’s ‘criminal past’

Cedric Alexander, the former police chief of DeKalb County, warned CNN hosts on Thursday that they were muddying the facts regarding the death of a Charlotte man by delving into his criminal record.

On Tuesday, police shot 43-year-old Keith Lamont Scott while attempting to search for another man with outstanding warrants. Although the Charlotte Police Department stated that Scott was repeatedly told to drop his weapon, Chief Kerr Putney admitted on Thursday that video of the shooting did not prove that he was holding a gun when he was shot.

Follow Putney’s press conference on Thursday, CNN correspondent Polo Sandoval revealed that he had been digging into Scott’s criminal history, which includes an assault charge and prison time.

“We are discussing this for two reasons,” Sandoval explained. “Because it now tells us that Scott did, in fact, at least have a past as a violent — or a violent conviction in his criminal history. And it also is important here because state law prevents — or at least calls it unlawful for a convicted felon to be in possession of a firearm.”

“It’s important to keep in mind we now know that Keith Scott did have at least a violent past going back to 2002 when he was convicted of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon,” the CNN correspondent opined.

CNN host John Berman noted that there was no evidence that Charlotte police officers were aware of Scott’s record when he was shot to death.

Alexander suggested that CNN had been out of line with the report on Scott’s criminal record.

“When we start to receive information about someone’s criminal past, we have to be very, very careful when we insert that information because it comes across as being defensive,” he explained. “That’s exactly what you guys are alluding too and that’s what you oftentimes hear people in the community say. We have a case involving a subject but somehow the criminal past is brought into play.”

“In the course of this investigation that is being viewed by the public in Charlotte and across the country and around this world, when you insult that type of information, you have to be very careful to separate it from what we know happened up to this point,” he added. “Because the perception is going to be from a group of people who are very frustrated, very angry, very mad about what’s going on across the country, and quite frankly very frightened.”

“Inserting that is to say, ‘Hey, he was a criminal anyway.’ He may have had a criminal past but we have to look at the relevancy of these cases.”

Watch the video below from CNN, broadcast Sept. 22, 2016.


 
I saw a report that the police have dash cam footage of ol boy stepping out of the car with a gun. Officer ordered him to drop the gun and he didn't comply. If this is true, then there you have it folks, text book way on how to get shot by a cop.
 
Cain;9372713 said:
VIBE;9372702 said:
what did they say about what is on the video? that he had nothing in his hands or they couldn't tell?

They didn't say but they definitely want the general public to see the video

If true, there's likely an immediate rush to write a check to shove in their mouths. If they go from the public needs to know to "we're confident in the justice process" then, well, you know...
 
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http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news...finitive-evidence-he-pointed-gun-cops-n652631

Family Sees Video, Says Keith Scott Was Walking Backward When He Was Shot

Keith Lamont Scott was calmly walking backward when Charlotte, N.C., police shot him to death this week, a lawyer for Scott's family said after relatives were allowed to watch police video of the shooting.

In a statement Thursday night, Justin Bamberg, a lawyer for the family, said Scott, 43, exited his vehicle "in a very calm, non-aggressive manner" when ordered to do so by police Tuesday afternoon outside a condominium complex near the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

And when he was shot, "Mr. Scott's hands were by his side and he was slowly walking backwards," according to Bamberg.

Police have said Scott was armed and posed an imminent deadly threat when he was shot by Charlotte-Mecklenburg County police Officer Brentley Vinson, who, like Scott, is African-American. They said a gun was found near his body.

On some points, Bamberg indicated that Scott's widow, Rakeyia Scott, and other relatives concurred with several observations made by Police Chief Kerr Putney.

Putney said Thursday that the video showed that officers gave Scott multiple commands before they opened fire. Bamberg also said the video shows that "police did give him several commands."

And Putney said the video didn't show "absolute definitive, visual evidence" that Scott brandished a weapon at the officers. Bamberg also said "it is impossible to discern from the videos what, if anything, Mr. Scott is holding in his hands."

Where police and the family disagree is in their characterizations of Scott's actions toward police.

Putney has said that Scott acted aggressively and threateningly and that the video "supports what we've heard and the version of the truth that we gave about the circumstances."

"If there's an encounter [and] you go down and the weapon is right there, it's kind of obvious a weapon was involved, even though I didn't visually see it from my angle," Putney told NBC station WCNC.

The family, meanwhile, says Scott was cooperative and calm.

"After watching the videos, the family again has more questions than answers," Bamberg said.


Bamberg didn't address the publication of a photo taken by a witness that appears to show a gun on the ground near Scott's body moments after the shooting.

But he did address one unsettled point raised by some of Scott's relatives, who have said since almost immediately after the shootingnot only that he was unarmed, but also that he was disabled.

Bamberg said at a news conference that Scott was involved in a "very bad accident approximately a year ago, suffered some pretty severe bodily injuries, suffered some head trauma."

He provided no details of the accident or of the nature of Scott's injuries, but he repeated: "At the end of the day, he was disabled."


Charlotte has been roiled by protests following Scott's death, and Mayor Jennifer Roberts ordered a curfew from midnight to 6 a.m. Friday. Large protests continued Thursday night, but so far they had remained peaceful.

A man who was shot Wednesday night in what police described as a "protester-on-protester" clash died Thursday, police said. Police arrested 44 people on charges including failure to disperse, assault, and breaking and entering.

The National Guard and state troopers were deployed to help local police in case protests continued Thursday night after North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory declared a state of emergency.

The police video, and the differing interpretations of it, remained at the center of the contentiousness Thursday. Three of the officers involved in Scott's shooting were wearing body cameras, although Officer Brentley Vinson, who fired the fatal shot, wasn't, Putney said.

Vinson, 26, who is also African-American, has been placed on paid administrative leave, as is standard procedure.

Scott's family added their voices to calls from community members and activists who said the video should be viewed in order to clear up discrepancies between the police's account and the family's version.

"It was incredibly difficult for members of the Scott family to view these videos, but as a matter of the greater good and transparency, the Scott family asks that the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department publicly immediately release both of the videos they watched today," Bamberg said.


While Putney agreed to let Scott's family the videos, he said he wouldn't make them public to "protect the integrity of the investigation."

Later, in the interview with WCNC, he acknowledged that because McCrory had assigned the State Bureau of Investigation to conduct an independent investigation, "it's going to be out of my hands."

Roberts, the mayor, said that she hadn't seen the videos and that she didn't think they should be released while the investigation is active.
 
Cain;9373102 said:
The Mayor just said the video is ambiguous and that the SBI (state bureau of investigation) will handle the car from here on our. Basically means that video could go either way and no real solid answer was given in the vid

That's still just a person in the system talking. Show the video so we can see for ourselves.
 
The Lonious Monk;9371527 said:
ghostdog56;9371471 said:
The Lonious Monk;9371449 said:
ghostdog56;9371437 said:
stringer bell;9371418 said:
https://twitter.com/RachelRollar/status/778934266109583364
https://twitter.com/RachelRollar/status/778934266109583364

So they need all that shit even though all niggas is doing is throwing rocks and shouting obscenities? This just shows you how much they fear black people

Wasn't somebody shot and killed by another protester? It ain't just shouting obscenities. They are doing all that to make sure it doesn't progress. Also, believe it or not, they are better off with the national guard out there. If I'm not mistaken their use of force policy is more like the military than the police.

But what about black on black crime, niggas kill each other everyday and their is no national guard brought in they are there to protect white people and property not the protesters

What? That ain't even apples and oranges my nigga. That's apples and watermelons. We ain't talking some random killings that are part of some crime infested neighborhood. We're talking a high tension situation where you have a lot of people that are angry. That situation already has resulted in property damage and assaults, and now on top of all that someone has died. It's pretty much standard procedure to bring in the National Guard for shit like that.

And by the way, the National Guard has been called in before when street violence in a city went overboard. Ask Camden, NJ in the 90s.

Bunch of people in a crowd and somebody shoots a protester. Yeah they needed to get shit under control.
 
The Lonious Monk;9373145 said:
Cain;9373102 said:
The Mayor just said the video is ambiguous and that the SBI (state bureau of investigation) will handle the car from here on our. Basically means that video could go either way and no real solid answer was given in the vid

That's still just a person in the system talking. Show the video so we can see for ourselves.

They're procrastinating, we're never seeing that video and if we do it'll be heavily edited.
 
I don't understand why every black man that doesn't go with BLM is called a coon etc, shouldn't people have the right to do what they wanna do and say what they wanna say
 
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This is the image of the week. This fool out here looking like Duran Duran kicking in Windows and shit
 
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UglySnowflake;9373309 said:
I don't understand why every black man that doesn't go with BLM is called a coon etc, shouldn't people have the right to do what they wanna do and say what they wanna say

Why would any black person disagree with BLM (the organization aside)?
 
[Trillmatic];9372158 said:
I saw a report that the police have dash cam footage of ol boy stepping out of the car with a gun. Officer ordered him to drop the gun and he didn't comply. If this is true, then there you have it folks, text book way on how to get shot by a cop.

Witness account of the shooting....she gives a lot of detail.


 
UglySnowflake;9373543 said:
Until I see a video with him pointing a gun I side with Crutcher

Terrance Crutcher happened in Tulsa....that video came out already....

This thread is about Keith Lamont Scott in Charlotte.....no footage has been released yet
 
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