Murderous Pig who killed Walter Scott trial begins in South Carolina...

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stringer bell;9469649 said:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/michael-slager-lawyers-dismiss-walter-scott-murder-case-article-1.2851212

Lawyers for Michael Slager try dismissing Walter Scott murder case as ‘politically motivated’

Lawyers for the former South Carolina police officer charged with murdering an unarmed black man are trying to end his murder trial before it starts.

Michael Slager's defense team spent last week attempting to dismiss the case right before its jury selection, writing off his prosecution as a “politically motivated” attack on police.

Slager, a white former North Charleston cop, faces a state murder count and federal civil rights charges for the April 2015 shooting of Walter Scott, who ran away from him during a traffic stop. Slager, citing self-defense, has pleaded not guilty.

His attorneys argued that Slager is the victim of an unfair “double teaming” from state and federal prosecutors.

“The double-teaming of Slager ... is a chilling example of how far politically motivated politicians and prosecutors will go to seek headlines and feather their own nests at the expense of a public servant,” the defense wrote in a recent court filing, according to the Post and Courier.

The filing called the case against Slager “unconscionable” and said the former officer is being judged by “comfortable armchair quarterbacks” and “crushed by the logistical, financial and fiscally frivolous policy of simultaneous prosecution.”

State Circuit Judge Clifton Newman did not take up the long-shot dismissal motion at a Friday hearing, because prosecutors had not prepared an argument opposing it. Jury selection is set to start Monday.

Slager faces life imprisonment, and could have also faced the death penalty, but prosecutors chose not to pursue it.

The filing also revealed that federal prosecutors gave Slager a chance to plead guilty before his indictment, offering in return to drop a gun charge carrying a 10-year minimum sentence. Slager refused the offer and was indicted two weeks later.

Smh...

SMMFH.
 
1CK1S;9471063 said:
Welp SC is gonna riot soon...

Murder trial S.C. cop features 11 white jurors

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Against a backdrop of violence by and toward police across the nation, opening statements will get underway Thursday in the murder trial of a white former police officer charged in the shooting death of an unarmed black motorist.

A panel of 11 white jurors and one black juror will decide the case against Michael Slager, who faces 30 years to life if convicted of murder in the April 2015 shooting death of 50-year-old Walter Scott. Scott fled a traffic stop in North Charleston and his shooting was captured by a bystander on dramatic cellphone video that stunned the nation.

As testimony begins in the Slager trial, a similar trial is underway in Ohio in which a white campus police officer is charged in the death of a black man. And on Wednesday, authorities apprehended a suspect in the deaths of two Iowa officers shot while sitting in their patrol cars.

Just how much the broader issues of race, violence and law enforcement should be raised during the Slager trial was discussed by attorneys as Judge Clifton Newman heard some final motions in the case.

“It’s important we not go down the slippery slope of every officer-involved shooting,” said prosecutor Scarlett Wilson. “The only thing that is relevant is what the defendant did that day and what was going through his head at the time.”

Don McCune, one of Slager’s defense attorneys, said the case is a bellwether for many people.

“We can’t carve Charleston County out of the rest of the world,” he said.

During jury selection, the defense struck nine potential jurors, including seven minorities. The prosecution challenged whether race was being used as a basis for disqualifying those potential jurors and the defense provided detailed reasons for its strikes.

Some of those reasons were not having a good understanding of English, expressing anti-gun sentiments and, in one case, being a friend of the medical examiner, who is expected to testify.

Walter Scott was killed in the shooting. Image by: Facebook

Figures released by the clerk of court in Charleston County show that of the pool of 75 qualified jurors from which the jury was selected, 16 were black, or just more than 20 percent. The black population of the state and the county is about 28 percent.

Slager, 34, also faces trial next year in federal court on several charges, including violating Scott’s civil rights.

What tha fuck!? They're TRYING to get a hung jury!
 
http://www.live5news.com/story/33631109/naacp-addresses-media-on-jury-selection-in-slager-trial

NAACP addresses media on jury selection in Slager trial

CHARLESTON, SC (WCSC) -

The Charleston chapter of the NAACP held a news conference on the selection of the jury in the Michael Slager trial while court was adjourned for lunch Friday.

Some eyebrows were raised after it was learned that the group chosen to decide Slager's fate was made up of eleven white jurors and one black juror.

"It is both disappointing and amazing that in Charleston County where 68 percent of the population is white, 90 percent of the jury is white," Chapter president Dot Scott said about what she called a troubling development in the trial.

Slager, a white former officer, is charged in the April 4, 2015 shooting death of Walter Scott, a black man, in a foot pursuit that ensued after a traffic stop.

Dot Scott said they understand that potential jurors are stricken by both the prosecution and the defense. She also said she and other members of the NAACP were not there to judge whether or not the jury could be impartial.

"We don't question the legality of the jurors' seating, but history tells us that when it comes to the judicial statement in our nation, state and community, what's legal is not always right."

Scott gave examples of white suspects in trials over the killings of black men being acquitted by all-white or majority white juries.

Scott said despite the jury not reflecting the diversity of the community, the NAACP hopes a just ruling is made.

Police dash cam video shows Scott running from his vehicle after being pulled over for a broken taillight on an April morning last year.

Slager told investigators he shot Scott in self-defense after Scott grabbed his Taser in a struggle during a foot pursuit.

The officer was charged with murder and fired after cell phone video shot by a bystander appeared to show Slager shooting Scott in the back as he ran.
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/04/us/walter-scott-michael-slager-trial.html

Walter Scott’s Character Scrutinized in Trial of Officer Who Killed Him

CHARLESTON, S.C. — The judge faced the jury on Thursday morning and spoke solemnly about “what many have called the greatest justice system ever created.” Then the murder trial of a member of the most visible arm of the justice system — a police officer — began in earnest.

To the chief prosecutor, the officer, Michael T. Slager, was an aberration of American policing, a malevolent lawman who “let his sense of authority get the better of him” when he shot and killed Walter L. Scott in April 2015. To Mr. Slager’s lawyer, the death of Mr. Scott, who was black, was an “awful but lawful” killing by a white officer who patrolled a troubled neighborhood in North Charleston and believed he was in danger.

Both sides portrayed Mr. Scott as an imperfect figure whose own behavior contributed to his killing, which was recorded on video by a bystander and emerged as one of the most wrenching symbols of the national debate over policing and race. For the jury of 11 white people and a black man, the questions that have swirled around Mr. Slager for nearly 19 months, including whether he planted evidence or misled investigators, have effectively been reduced to one: whether he opened fire with “malice aforethought.”


“Provocation is not the same as justification,” said Scarlett A. Wilson, the solicitor for Charleston County, who repeatedly used her 25-minute opening statement to accuse Mr. Slager of dishonesty.

Mr. Slager’s lawyer, Andrew J. Savage III, said the case was a complex one clouded by the prosecution’s reliance on “pure speculation to fit the narrative that the state wants you to believe.”

“He didn’t just shoot somebody,” Mr. Savage said of Mr. Slager, adding that the officer would have been right to worry about whether Mr. Scott posed a threat when he fled on foot after being stopped for a broken taillight.

The state trial of Mr. Slager, who is also facing civil rights charges in Federal District Court, could last well into November, and he could be sentenced to life in prison if he is convicted of murder. (Ms. Wilson, citing the absence of aggravating factors required by South Carolina law, is not seeking the death penalty.)

The fatal encounter between the men has been broadly dissected since a bystander recorded Mr. Slager firing eight rounds at Mr. Scott’s back, hitting him five times. Later in the video, Mr. Slager is seen dropping an item, which Ms. Wilson identified as the officer’s Taser device, near Mr. Scott.

Mr. Slager’s defense team has argued that a scuffle before the recording began, which prompted Mr. Slager to use his Taser, placed the officer at risk. But the video is expected to be central to the criminal case, as it was in the decisions to arrest and fire Mr. Slager, and for the City of North Charleston to agree to a $6.5 million settlement with Mr. Scott’s family.

For much of Thursday, discussion in the courtroom centered on the life of Mr. Scott and his choice to run from the police.

“If Walter Scott had stayed in that car, he wouldn’t have been shot,” Ms. Wilson said in an opening statement. “He paid the extreme consequence for his conduct. He lost his life for his foolishness.”

Mr. Savage made frequent references to Mr. Scott’s child support debts, which prosecutors and Mr. Scott’s family members believe led him to flee out of fear of being arrested, as well as his criminal history and drug use
.

Prosecutors were plainly aware that such a narrative could have powerful effects on the jury, and Mr. Scott’s family, which on Thursday dismissed complaints about the panel’s makeup, expected that his past would be fodder at the trial. In an interview last week, Mr. Scott’s brother, Anthony Scott, predicted that Mr. Savage would try “to belittle Walter and bring his character down when his character is not in play.”

But even as she raised the matter of Mr. Scott’s actions after he was stopped, Ms. Wilson tried to redirect attention toward Mr. Slager.

“His first instinct after the shots were fired and he cuffed a dead Walter Scott was to stage — to stage a scene,” Ms. Wilson said. “His first instinct wasn’t to give CPR. It wasn’t to give first aid. It was to stage.”

It would ultimately fall to the jury, Ms. Wilson said, to “bring accountability to Michael Slager for his choices.”

Mr. Savage, who referred to “the climate of this country and the focus of the media” after police-involved killings in places like Baltimore; Cleveland; and Ferguson, Mo., asked the jurors to concentrate on Mr. Scott’s actions and how Mr. Slager might have interpreted them. He depicted Mr. Slager as an officer with an employment record of “exceptional excellence,” and he suggested that Mr. Scott had been a clear danger.

“He didn’t just run,” Mr. Savage said. “He physically and forcefully resisted to the extent that they were both fighting on the ground.”


Testimony will resume Friday, when the prosecution is expected to call its ninth witness. No one who testified on Thursday, including Mr. Scott’s mother and one of his sons, was present for the shooting.

But some witnesses, in terms sober and pointed, addressed its aftermath.

Ms. Wilson asked Pierre Fulton, who was riding with Mr. Scott when Mr. Slager stopped them, why his friend had run from the police.

“That’s a question I would like to ask him,” Mr. Fulton replied. “Unfortunately, he’s not here.”
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/05/us/charleston-michael-slager-walter-scott-trial.html?_r=0

Tense Jurors in Michael Slager Trial See Video of Killing of Walter Scott

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Before court began here on Friday, the county’s chief prosecutor stepped into the gallery and spoke quietly to the family of Walter L. Scott, a black man who was shot and killed by a white police officer last year.

“The video’s coming up,” the prosecutor, Scarlett A. Wilson, said. “If you can’t take it, everybody understands that. It’s rough. It’s hard. It’s emotional.”

Less than two hours later, with Mr. Scott’s mother out of the courtroom, rapt jurors fixed their attention on the video: a cellphone recording of some of the fatal encounter between Mr. Scott and Michael T. Slager, the North Charleston police officer now on trial for murder. The video shows Mr. Slager firing eight rounds toward the back of Mr. Scott, who had fled a traffic stop and become involved in a struggle with the officer.

As the jury of 11 white people and a black man watched State’s Exhibit No. 237, a female juror held her right hand to her lower lip. A male juror repeatedly swallowed. Mr. Slager watched the video on a screen near the defense table as the sound of gunfire boomed, shot after shot, through the courtroom.

“It was an injustice what I saw,” testified Feidin Santana, who recorded the video on his way to work on April 4, 2015.

Mr. Santana, the only witness to the shooting besides Mr. Slager, said he had been first drawn by the sight of Mr. Scott running. Moments later, Mr. Slager came into view.

Mr. Santana said he had heard the buzz of a Taser and watched Mr. Slager punch Mr. Scott’s side. Using his cellphone’s camera, Mr. Santana taped the men as they tussled.

Then Mr. Slager opened fire, and Mr. Scott fell to the ground. Mr. Santana testified that the officer handcuffed Mr. Scott, who was not moving.

“At any point, did you see Walter Scott coming at Officer Slager?” Ms. Wilson asked.

“That never happened,” Mr. Santana replied.

Mr. Santana acknowledged ignoring an officer’s request that he stay around, and he did not immediately supply the video, which became a stirring symbol of the national debate over race and policing, to city or state investigators. Instead, Mr. Santana said, he provided the video to Mr. Scott’s family and sat for multiple news media interviews before meeting with the authorities.

Mr. Santana said he wanted to ensure his personal protection, and he testified that his lawyer had arranged the payments he received from licensing the video. But faced with the most damning evidence of the trial, Mr. Slager’s lawyer, Andrew J. Savage III, pointedly tried to undermine Mr. Santana’s credibility and fact-check his memory.

Mr. Savage picked at details: Why, for instance, did Mr. Santana take a long, indirect route to work on a day he was running late? And with a stanza of a song that Mr. Santana wrote, the defense lawyer moved to portray the witness as a man with a distrust of law enforcement that predated the shooting.

“It’s all war, trouble, police abuse and those who must defend us as the worst criminals,” Mr. Santana wrote about six months before the shooting. “Who can I trust? Tell me.”

Mr. Santana said he did not oppose the police, generally.

“I’m against police brutality,” he said, adding, “I write how I see things, you know, in the moment.”

Mr. Slager, who was fired after the shooting, could be sentenced to life in prison if he is convicted of murder in state court, where his trial will resume on Monday. He has also been indicted on federal civil rights charges.

The video could resurface in the state trial, in which Judge Clifton B. Newman on Friday denied a defense request to block the footage from being played in slow motion. The recording is also expected to be crucial evidence in the federal case.

Yet Mr. Santana testified that he did recognize what was unfolding as he recorded the video on the morning before Easter. He first thought Mr. Slager’s handgun had been loaded with rubber projectiles.

“I didn’t know it was real bullets,” he said.
 
http://www.postandcourier.com/news/...cle_7f3a7ade-a23a-11e6-ae8e-079eb54352a2.html

Feidin Santana testifies for hours in Michael Slager trial: 'I know it was an injustice, what I saw'

At first, Feidin Santana never wanted this day to come.

It was just by chance that he filmed a North Charleston police officer shooting Walter Scott to death last year. He was scared to go to the authorities, to one day be responsible for the testimony that prosecutors hope would result in the lawman’s conviction.

But for nearly four hours Friday, the 25-year-old took the witness stand, describing how he eventually saw a responsibility to bring his footage to the world. He withstood heated questioning by former patrolman Michael Slager’s defense lawyer, who challenged Santana for the fame and fortune the video brought, for the mistrust of police that the immigrant barber expressed in songwriting before the shooting.


Santana didn’t crumble under pressure. Soft-spoken at times and using broken English, his second language, he used the heated moments to say what motivated him to speak out.

“My fear was to be here where I’m at today … to be part of this,” Santana testified. “But at the same time, I know it was an injustice, what I saw.”

Santana’s testimony Friday brought full circle his role as the linchpin of the prosecution that advocates against alleged police abuses in North Charleston and beyond are watching closely. With headphones strapped over their heads, 12 jurors watched his video for the first time, their eyes glued intently to large television screens that showed Scott, 50, separating himself from the officer and running away as the lawman opened fire. Some took notes after the gunfire subsided. All appeared straight-faced.

Members of the local Black Lives Matter movement and other community leaders filled a back pew of Courtroom 4C of the county courthouse in downtown Charleston. Friday followed an opening day of testimony that few public observers saw in person. The spectators included a man who burned an American flag in Marion Square shortly after nine black people were slain last year at Emanuel AME Church. Ron Burris, who was shot several times by North Charleston police in 1999, also watched.

Despite the stir Santana’s video caused when it surfaced three days after the shooting, prompting Slager’s arrest, one of the jurors charged with deliberating the former officer’s future said he had never seen it before. The juror, No. 417 and the sole black man on the panel, was one of nine people in a 188-member pool of prospective jurors who professed to have never "heard anything about this case through the media, through observation of the video, from friends or any other sources," a court transcript released Friday revealed.

Of the 12 people picked for the primary jury, 11 of them are white. The black juror is the only member of the 18 total jurors, including alternates, who said he didn't know about the case.

The death of Scott, who was black, at a white officer's hands came amid a nationwide examination of police-involved deaths of black men. Some civil rights advocates have voiced concern about a racial makeup of the jury that doesn't reflect the Charleston region's population.


The public was barred from the early stage of the selection process on Monday when the would-be juror was queried about his knowledge. The Post and Courier later voiced concern with court officials that potential jurors were being asked about the case behind closed doors, and the presiding judge later opened the courtroom.

The newspaper and other news outlets requested a transcript of that portion of the proceeding. It was made public Friday.

But it was Santana’s day in the courtroom.

His step into the courthouse was a step back into the spotlight that he has shied away from since moving out of the area last year. Shortly after the video emerged last year, he made an appearance on NBC Nightly News. More interviews would follow. The video later inspired a push for a law that requires all South Carolina police officers to use body-worn cameras.

Since then, he has all but ducked public appearances in front of the many elected leaders who labeled him a hero, though he took to Facebook before his testimony to announce he had been awaiting a triumphant return.

"It's been a long journey," he said. "Now the day has arrived. Those who have (believed) in me, those who have (doubted) my statement or our evidence (video), you will see today that the truth will prevail.
"

‘Never forget’

Santana turned his chair toward the jurors as 9th Circuit Solicitor Scarlett Wilson questioned him.

He worked in the U.S. to earn money as an unlicensed barber, he testified, but his heart was with his family in his native Dominican Republican.

If it were not for a fateful set of circumstances, he never would have filmed Scott’s death on April 4, 2015. He had just returned from a visit to his native land the day before, and he was supposed to be at work at a local barbershop at 7 a.m., but he overslept.

He walked toward the shop, as he always did, and talked on his cellphone when he saw a black man run by, then a policeman. Slager had stopped Scott that day for a broken brake light, and Scott ran.

The defense would later aim to discredit Santana in a legal tactic called impeachment. A lawyer wondered why he was walking through such a crime- and drug-ridden area.

Santana ran into an alleyway to catch up to the men and see what was going on. The sound of Slager’s Taser going off led him to them. He saw Slager, he said, standing and trying to control Scott. He started filming with his phone from about 60 yards away. He zoomed in.

“(Scott) got up aggressively,” he recalled, but he didn’t know how to explain it.

He left the witness stand and crouched on the floor in front of the jury. He became Scott. Wilson became Slager. The prosecutor grabbed his right arm, how he said the officer tried to control Scott. Santana twisted and yanked his arm away from Wilson. He turned and looked away.

He repeated twice that he “never, never” saw Scott charging at Slager.

Later under cross-examination, Santana would say that his video showed Slager reaching for his pistol before Scott turned away and ran.

“That’s been something that I will never forget,” Santana said. “He shoot a man running. … He shoot until (Scott) went to the ground.”

He didn’t know if Scott was dead. He said Clarence Habersham, the first backup officer whose testimony Friday was cut short by the weekend recess, said Scott was OK. Santana thought Slager might have been using rubber bullets. He told another policeman he had captured what happened on video, “that what I saw was abuse,” he testified.

The jurors watched his video. Some chewed gum as it played.
 
‘Truth is the truth’

Santana left the scene. He hoped Scott would live to tell the story without his video’s help. But he later learned that Scott had died. He grew fearful. He wanted to retreat to his family in the Dominican.

But he started hearing Slager’s claim of self-defense on the news.

“It was an injustice,” he testified. “(I couldn’t) just erase the video and leave.”

A barbershop client and friend, Stall High School Assistant Principal Tawayne Weems, was one of the first people who saw the footage on Santana’s phone. He consoled Santana, Weems testified Friday. But Santana’s fear of the authorities became paranoia, and Weems referred him to a mental health counselor.

“I knew that it was going to become a big item,” Weems said of the video. “This was the precipice of something big.”

Santana reached out to Muhiyidin d’Baha, a leader in the Black Lives Matter Charleston group who has attended the trial this week. He eventually found himself sitting in a car with Scott’s brother, Anthony, and sister-in-law, playing the video. Attorneys would later get involved.

“They cried,” he said of the family members. “I’m showing them the other side of the story … the truth.”

Justin Bamberg, a Scott family lawyer, put Santana in touch with lawyer Todd Rutherford, who now represents him. Rutherford set up a fundraising web page for him and also started charging for video use, he said. The Post and Courier did not pay for the video.

"The first thing I say is that I feel that (making money off the video) would be disrespectful to the family of Walter Scott," he said. "So I say, if the family agree, I agree."

When defense attorney Andy Savage grilled Santana under cross-examination, presiding Circuit Judge Clifton Newman often interjected, taking issue with the lawyer’s style of questioning. Newman once said, “The objection is sustained.” It was his own objection.

Santana insisted they he never saw Scott with the officer’s Taser, never saw Scott fighting with Slager or getting the upper hand in the struggle.

“The truth is the truth,” he said to Savage. “Same to you, same to the prosecutor.”

Savage sought to show jurors that Santana had seen the confrontation between Scott and Slager through a certain prism, one tinged with mistrust of law enforcement, one that might cause him to overlook details. The attorney pointed to song lyrics that had been written six months earlier: "It’s all war, police abuse, and those who must defend us are the worst criminals. Who can I trust?"

Those words were Santana's, he acknowledged.

“I’m against police brutality," Santana said. "I don’t tolerate injustice.”
 
He'll walk. They already set the stage with the jury and for the sake of an uprising I hope he does. The brother is gone, no bringing him back but the slaps in the face gotta stop now. MC Hammer- "Let's Get It Started!"
 
SolemnSauce;9466631 said:
not even worried bout that, the old heads that have a lil power already told dem white folks...aint gone be no holdin back da dogs if he gets acquitted. and they are dead ass serious, this aint no Charlotte...shit gone get real serious...real quick. that man gone do 15 to life with a chance of parole in 50...watch

yeah ok LOL........we'll see

u seriously underestimate how much white supremacy runs shit in SC

ain't no way I'm supposed to believe black people there got enough pull to influence a court of law in SC when the statehouse just damn near pulled the Confederate flag down like practically yesterday

unless u trying to say niggaz in SC gave the state "permission" to fly the flag all this time

Stiff;9466654 said:
There is NO way he walks from shooting a man in the back as ran away on camera and then planting his taser next to his body after initially pulling him over for a routine traffic stop. I would be shocked. EVEN from racist ass South Carolina within the racist ass American justice system. If he walks..then I don't know. I would be shocked as crazy as it may sound I would truly be shocked.

I could see them finding him guilty and then pulling some fuck shit like giving him 2 years or something...but a flat out NOT GUILTY? Oh hell nah

in SC??? shit they literally had a cop in Aiken literally fingerfuck a dude on the side of the road for an illegal search not too long ago..........and the news barely even covered it

and there are a lot of black people in the Aiken/Augusta area.....no riots/nothing in the streets

that shit barely made the news and guarantee that cop is still on duty TODAY

u can't be surprised to see anything these days SMH
 
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11 white jurors

The black 1 gotta holdout like

200w.gif


 
http://www.postandcourier.com/news/...cle_ebf79f0c-a498-11e6-9854-a73d6883c4fb.html

Michael Slager's fellow officers questioned on Walter Scott shooting

Fellow officers thought Michael Slager had opened fire on Walter Scott at close range to fend off an attack, they testified Monday in Slager’s murder trial.

But a cellphone video showed Scott running away when Slager pulled the trigger eight times. Five bullets hit Scott from behind.

Prosecutors contend that the footage contradicts the account Slager gave to other policemen in the moments after the April 4, 2015, killing. But several of the officers who took the witness stand on the third day of testimony in Slager’s trial stressed that they believed Slager had been in a rough-and-tumble fight, apparent from his disheveled clothing, scrapes and cuts.

Heated questioning from defense attorneys and prosecutors sometimes elicited the officers’ interpretations of the video and their opinions of whether an officer in Slager's situation would have been justified by shooting Scott. One supervisor contradicted himself, once saying that Scott’s flight showed waning resistance and next that Scott’s behavior posed a lingering threat.

While little new information was revealed Monday — two of the three officers had testified in a pretrial hearing — the proceeding for the first time revealed their take on the shooting that captured the world’s attention. Most seemed to stand by Slager, who faces between 30 years and life in prison if convicted of murder.

One of the prosecution witnesses, Sgt. James Gann, was supervising Slager's squad that day.

“Was he trained by the North Charleston Police Department to shoot someone in the back while he’s running away?” Chief Deputy Solicitor Bruce DuRant asked him.

“No, sir,” Gann answered. But the questioning continued.

“Would you agree that running away is de-escalating?” the prosecutor asked.

Gann sighed twice and asked DuRant to ask the question again. He sighed a third time.

“Through the video,” Gann answered, “I would say (Scott) was “de-escalating.”

The defense also laid more of the groundwork for its own case through cross-examination of the witnesses.

In response to lead defense attorney Andy Savage’s questions, North Charleston Lt. Dan Bowman said officers “were encouraged” to make traffic stops and field interviews of pedestrians as a way to fight violent crime. Savage intends to present such testimony to account for his client's thoughts on that day.

“That’s what was considered community policing in North Charleston?” Savage said.

“That’s correct,” Bowman answered.

In September, a Post and Courier investigation, “Watched,” revealed that North Charleston and other police agencies nationwide have amassed huge databases of personal information from the field interviews that officers complete. Critics contend that the push for such records has driven officers into unnecessary confrontations. North Charleston has amassed 34,000 such entries since 2009.

Traffic stops in the city also have come under scrutiny. Black drivers are most often stopped in North Charleston, though the city's population is 47 percent black. The stops have waned, though, since Scott’s death: About 26,000 people were pulled over in the nine months after the shooting, compared with 54,000 in the same period the year before.


'Trying to protect his life'

Slager stopped Scott's car last year for a broken brake light, and Scott ran away. The officer chased him, getting into a struggle in which Slager said Scott grabbed his Taser. A bystander started filming as the men returned to their feet. The Taser fell behind Slager as the officer pulled his .45-caliber pistol. Scott had turned away before the gunfire resounded.

During the struggle, Slager had radioed his patrol partner, officer Clarence Habersham, to hurry up. Habersham testified Monday that his adrenaline started pumping when he heard Slager's call for help. It was apparent, he testified, that Slager “was in a physical altercation.”

Habersham was the first backup officer to show up, and he became the focus of scrutiny in the shooting's aftermath. Critics said he didn’t give Scott adequate care and didn’t say anything in a police report to challenge Slager’s version of what happened. But Habersham insisted in testimony that he never saw Slager drop a Taser near Scott’s body — what prosecutors said was the officer’s initial bid to stage the scene. Slager soon picked up the device.

Habersham, who recently left the Police Department for a job at a clothing manufacturer, testified that he had zeroed in on helping Scott. He grabbed his first aid kit, and he and another officer did CPR on Scott, they said Monday.

Attorneys did not goad Habersham into expressing views about the shooting. Slager was known to him, he said, as a “proactive … professional” policeman.

But that comment launched prosecutors into a look at Slager's past. They noted that Slager had activated his Taser about 12 times in five years, compared with Habersham's three times over a nine-year career.

Presiding Circuit Judge Clifton Newman allowed jurors to hear that element of Slager's history, while he has narrowed the opportunities for the defense to bring up Scott's past. Background on both the defendant and the victim are typically restricted in criminal trials.


Defense lawyers and prosecutors also have been given leeway in prefacing their questions with statements. Both sides have accused the other of testifying for the witnesses. Newman warned them to avoid that Monday.

But it continued. Habersham was questioned about his radio communications as he responded to help Slager.

“Slager was in a fight on the ground trying to protect his life," Savage said, "when you made that call?”


'
 
Very close together'

Some jurors’ heads moved from side to side, their gaze swiveling from the attorneys to the witnesses when each spoke. Some eyes stayed glued on the witnesses. Others often looked at Scott's family in the crowd.

Most of the attorneys' points — even small ones — were contested. Prosecutors pointed to Slager's shirt that remained tucked in as evidence that he had not been in a fight. The defense produced a photograph of the strap running down Slager's leg that kept his shirttails tucked in.

Slager was otherwise “disheveled” when Bowman saw him at the scene, the lieutenant testified. Slager’s uniform was dusty and dirty, and Bowman told the defense that “there’s no question” the officer had been in a fight on the ground.

But, the prosecution asked, did Slager say he had been punched? No. Kicked? No. Scratched? No. Tased? No. Did Scott get on top of him? No.

At least four officers, including Gann and Bowman, heard Slager’s account of the shooting. More are expected to testify in the coming days.

Gann saw some of the most heated questioning Monday. He repeated that Slager and Scott had been fighting over the Taser. “My understanding was that Mr. Scott had the Taser, and they were very close together … within 3 to 4 feet” when Slager fired, he said.

Gann paused when he was pressed on general questions about his training, about when it’s right to fire at someone.

Raising his voice, the otherwise soft-spoken Savage asked if Scott had been frisked for weapons before the confrontation with Slager. He had not. For the first time in the trial, Savage posed the possibility that Slager thought Scott was armed.

“The only rational interpretation (for Scott’s irrational behavior) … was that he had something else to offer, such as a lethal weapon?” Savage asked Gann.

Prosecutors objected to the question, and the judge dubbed the lawyer's comment “improper.”

Muttering that prosecutors had used similar questions with Gann, Savage tried again, asking whether Scott’s actions before the shooting showed any signs of de-escalation.

“I would have to say no,” Gann said.

Habersham was the first backup officer to show up, and he became the focus of scrutiny in the shooting's aftermath. Critics said he didn’t give Scott adequate care and didn’t say anything in a police report to challenge Slager’s version of what happened. But Habersham insisted in testimony that he never saw Slager drop a Taser near Scott’s body

916Police%20Shooting%20North%20Charleston.JPEG


What a lying coon ass nigga.. Smh...
 
Last edited:
stringer bell;9485940 said:
Very close together'

Some jurors’ heads moved from side to side, their gaze swiveling from the attorneys to the witnesses when each spoke. Some eyes stayed glued on the witnesses. Others often looked at Scott's family in the crowd.

Most of the attorneys' points — even small ones — were contested. Prosecutors pointed to Slager's shirt that remained tucked in as evidence that he had not been in a fight. The defense produced a photograph of the strap running down Slager's leg that kept his shirttails tucked in.

Slager was otherwise “disheveled” when Bowman saw him at the scene, the lieutenant testified. Slager’s uniform was dusty and dirty, and Bowman told the defense that “there’s no question” the officer had been in a fight on the ground.

But, the prosecution asked, did Slager say he had been punched? No. Kicked? No. Scratched? No. Tased? No. Did Scott get on top of him? No.

At least four officers, including Gann and Bowman, heard Slager’s account of the shooting. More are expected to testify in the coming days.

Gann saw some of the most heated questioning Monday. He repeated that Slager and Scott had been fighting over the Taser. “My understanding was that Mr. Scott had the Taser, and they were very close together … within 3 to 4 feet” when Slager fired, he said.

Gann paused when he was pressed on general questions about his training, about when it’s right to fire at someone.

Raising his voice, the otherwise soft-spoken Savage asked if Scott had been frisked for weapons before the confrontation with Slager. He had not. For the first time in the trial, Savage posed the possibility that Slager thought Scott was armed.

“The only rational interpretation (for Scott’s irrational behavior) … was that he had something else to offer, such as a lethal weapon?” Savage asked Gann.

Prosecutors objected to the question, and the judge dubbed the lawyer's comment “improper.”

Muttering that prosecutors had used similar questions with Gann, Savage tried again, asking whether Scott’s actions before the shooting showed any signs of de-escalation.

“I would have to say no,” Gann said.

Habersham was the first backup officer to show up, and he became the focus of scrutiny in the shooting's aftermath. Critics said he didn’t give Scott adequate care and didn’t say anything in a police report to challenge Slager’s version of what happened. But Habersham insisted in testimony that he never saw Slager drop a Taser near Scott’s body

916Police%20Shooting%20North%20Charleston.JPEG


What a lying coon ass nigga.. Smh...

Lmao at this little man. His entire existence, his entire reason for being is to serve the white man... just look at him
 
stringer bell;9485940 said:
Very close together'

Some jurors’ heads moved from side to side, their gaze swiveling from the attorneys to the witnesses when each spoke. Some eyes stayed glued on the witnesses. Others often looked at Scott's family in the crowd.

Most of the attorneys' points — even small ones — were contested. Prosecutors pointed to Slager's shirt that remained tucked in as evidence that he had not been in a fight. The defense produced a photograph of the strap running down Slager's leg that kept his shirttails tucked in.

Slager was otherwise “disheveled” when Bowman saw him at the scene, the lieutenant testified. Slager’s uniform was dusty and dirty, and Bowman told the defense that “there’s no question” the officer had been in a fight on the ground.

But, the prosecution asked, did Slager say he had been punched? No. Kicked? No. Scratched? No. Tased? No. Did Scott get on top of him? No.

At least four officers, including Gann and Bowman, heard Slager’s account of the shooting. More are expected to testify in the coming days.

Gann saw some of the most heated questioning Monday. He repeated that Slager and Scott had been fighting over the Taser. “My understanding was that Mr. Scott had the Taser, and they were very close together … within 3 to 4 feet” when Slager fired, he said.

Gann paused when he was pressed on general questions about his training, about when it’s right to fire at someone.

Raising his voice, the otherwise soft-spoken Savage asked if Scott had been frisked for weapons before the confrontation with Slager. He had not. For the first time in the trial, Savage posed the possibility that Slager thought Scott was armed.

“The only rational interpretation (for Scott’s irrational behavior) … was that he had something else to offer, such as a lethal weapon?” Savage asked Gann.

Prosecutors objected to the question, and the judge dubbed the lawyer's comment “improper.”

Muttering that prosecutors had used similar questions with Gann, Savage tried again, asking whether Scott’s actions before the shooting showed any signs of de-escalation.

“I would have to say no,” Gann said.

Habersham was the first backup officer to show up, and he became the focus of scrutiny in the shooting's aftermath. Critics said he didn’t give Scott adequate care and didn’t say anything in a police report to challenge Slager’s version of what happened. But Habersham insisted in testimony that he never saw Slager drop a Taser near Scott’s body

916Police%20Shooting%20North%20Charleston.JPEG


What a lying coon ass nigga.. Smh...

Ummm...he do realize they have video right???

Was that not him standing over Scott's body as Slager walked over and DROPPED the taser next to his body???
 
stringer bell;9471274 said:
Solicitor Scarlett Wilson started her opening statements about 9:45 a.m. and spoke for about 25 minutes, setting the scene on the April 4, 2015, encounter between Slager, then a North Charleston police officer, and Walter Scott, a motorist pulled over by Slager for a broken tail light.

"If Walter Scott had not resisted arrest, he wouldn't have been shot," she said. "He lost his life for his foolishness."

This sounds like a prosecutor actually trying to win the case with a all white southern jury.

The job isn't to say the victim was a saint, its to get a conviction.

 

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