South Carolina Officer Is Charged With Murder In Black Man’s Death

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nex gin;7948553 said:
Recaptimus_Prime360;7946966 said:
Got into a heated discussion wit a chick who felt the witness was "stupid" for thinking he feared for his life while deciding if he should've turned the video over.

Her logic: Cops wouldn't do that .

Smh.

The amount of naivety and delusion in this country is mind boggling. Hell...I felt dude was stupid for even going to the police in the first place......like dude you read the police report....saw they were lying and still thought it made sense to walk in the police station and tell them that you had video evidence to contradict their lies...??..

Bruh I floored when she said that. Lol. This hefa was deadazzz serious. Then tries to tell me how the cops are in my area, based off the cops in her area. Tryin to say b/c they don't act like that around her way, then surely they don't in MY area.

She ended up gettin mad when i pointed out how ridiculous her claims were, and had a hissy fit.
 
nex gin;7948553 said:
Recaptimus_Prime360;7946966 said:
Got into a heated discussion wit a chick who felt the witness was "stupid" for thinking he feared for his life while deciding if he should've turned the video over.

Her logic: Cops wouldn't do that .

Smh.

The amount of naivety and delusion in this country is mind boggling. Hell...I felt dude was stupid for even going to the police in the first place......like dude you read the police report....saw they were lying and still thought it made sense to walk in the police station and tell them that you had video evidence to contradict their lies...??..

That's beyond naivety though. She's basically discounting the possibility of a cops doing dirty shit in response to a cop doing some dirty shit. That would be like me watching someone jump into a pool of water and come out wet as hell, but then turn around and say I don't need and umbrella for rain because water doesn't get you wet. That shit makes no sense.
 
Mister B.;7948954 said:
The family doesn't want Rev. Rollo (Al Sharpton) at the funeral....

Link

'We don't want another Ferguson circus': Walter Scott family 'bar Rev Al Sharpton from the funeral to avoid over-the-top attention'

Rev Al Sharpton was vocal after Michael Brown was shot in Ferguson

He was criticized for stirring up rage as Missouri city was hit by violence

Family of father-of-four Walter Scott are planning relatives-only memorial service at home in North Charleston, South Carolina

His killing has grabbed national attention after video emerged showing white officer Michael Slager shooting him in the back

New video from Slager's car shows no violent conflict before Scott ran off

Another new video shows two officers arriving and not giving CPR

By The Associated Press

10:20 a.m.

The Rev. Al Sharpton plans to be in North Charleston this weekend to preach at a church in the aftermath of the fatal shooting of a black man by a white officer after a traffic stop.

Sharpton told The Associated Press on Friday that his message to the congregation of the Charity Missionary Baptist Church on Sunday will be that people pursue justice "in a peaceful, legal way."

Anthony Scott, the brother of victim Walter L. Scott, tells The Associated Press, that a representative of Sharpton's National Action Network has been working with family since the shooting last weekend.

Sharpton says he will not attend Scott's funeral Saturday because of a scheduling conflict. Anthony Scott says the funeral is open to the public.

Sharpton says he plans to preach Sunday morning and then meet privately with members of the Scott family. Later in the day he plans to attend a vigil at the site where Walter Scott was shot.
 
Off&On;7948972 said:
Anyone who is from north Charleston knows. North Charleston cops don't play that shit...Hanahan cops especially don't play that shit.

They will let go on you, and tho this is a tragedy. Its good to see that this is getting national attention. North Charleston cops are crooked as fuck.

They don't play when its qouta time. And you know when its qouta time when you hit rivers below remount and someone is pulled over every 500ft.

And the mayor, the mayor is the one who let's em run off like that. That cats just as crooked as them.

Nigga preach the gospel!
 
ibestrokin;7948539 said:
Pirithous Rex;7947822 said:
There are actually people, black people, saying that he deserved what he got because he ran from the police. So disgusted. A friend sent me a link to this guy Tommy soto something and he was blaming the man for "making the police shoot him". I am pissed beyond words.

little bro said that last night. he was like he shouldnt have ran. you know the protocol when youre black, and i agreed that we ALL know the protocol when youre stopped by the cops but you still dont shoot a man eight times in the back though.

Tell your brother next time he runs anywhere he's not supposed to the punishment is 8 shots at your back...sure he would change his opinion then
 
stringer bell;7949096 said:
Mister B.;7948954 said:
The family doesn't want Rev. Rollo (Al Sharpton) at the funeral....

Link

'We don't want another Ferguson circus': Walter Scott family 'bar Rev Al Sharpton from the funeral to avoid over-the-top attention'

Rev Al Sharpton was vocal after Michael Brown was shot in Ferguson

He was criticized for stirring up rage as Missouri city was hit by violence

Family of father-of-four Walter Scott are planning relatives-only memorial service at home in North Charleston, South Carolina

His killing has grabbed national attention after video emerged showing white officer Michael Slager shooting him in the back

New video from Slager's car shows no violent conflict before Scott ran off

Another new video shows two officers arriving and not giving CPR

By The Associated Press

10:20 a.m.

The Rev. Al Sharpton plans to be in North Charleston this weekend to preach at a church in the aftermath of the fatal shooting of a black man by a white officer after a traffic stop.

Sharpton told The Associated Press on Friday that his message to the congregation of the Charity Missionary Baptist Church on Sunday will be that people pursue justice "in a peaceful, legal way."

Anthony Scott, the brother of victim Walter L. Scott, tells The Associated Press, that a representative of Sharpton's National Action Network has been working with family since the shooting last weekend.

Sharpton says he will not attend Scott's funeral Saturday because of a scheduling conflict. Anthony Scott says the funeral is open to the public.

Sharpton says he plans to preach Sunday morning and then meet privately with members of the Scott family. Later in the day he plans to attend a vigil at the site where Walter Scott was shot.

But he ain't goin to the funeral, tho.....
 
http://sfist.com/2015/04/10/crowdfunding_campaign_launched_to_s.php

Updated] Crowdfunding Campaign Launched To Support South Carolina Officer Who Shot Unarmed Man

Even though GoFundMe has already rejected a campaign in support of Officer Michael T. Slager, the South Carolina cop who appears on video to have shot an unarmed man in the back after a routine traffic stop, San Francisco-based IndieGogo hasn't shown any such objections. A campaign started by someone named R Owens has raised $1,700 of its $5,000 goal to help Slager, who "may have made mis-steps in judgement" but "is a former Coast Guardsman with two stepchildren and a wife who is expecting a child."

As CBS 5 reports, via Mashable, GoFundMe rejected a campaign by the same group supporting Slager citing a violation of their terms of service. GoFundMe reserves the right to refuse "campaigns in defense of formal charges of heinous crimes, including violent, hateful, or sexual acts."

A group with a Twitter account titled MichaelSlagerDefense then decided to go with IndieGoGo instead, who so far have let the campaign go on since April 7.

IndieGoGo gave a statement explaining the choice, and obviously admitting their Terms of Use are kind of lax.

Indiegogo allows anyone, anywhere to fund ideas that matter to them and just like other open platforms — such as Facebook, YouTube and Twitter — we don’t judge the content of campaigns as long as they are in compliance with our Terms of Use.

Under IndieGogo's Terms of Use, the only kinds of campaigns they would reject, apart from those promoting illegal activity, would be those that "use the Services to promote violence, degradation, subjugation, discrimination or hatred against individuals or groups based on race, ethnic origin, religion, disability, gender, age, veteran status, sexual orientation, or gender identity."

Slager, 33, just to be clear, has been charged with murder in the shooting of Walter L. Scott, the 50-year-old black man whom he had just pulled over in a routine traffic stop. Dashboard camera footage emerged yesterday showing the exchange Slager had with Scott just before the shooting. In the video, Scott can be heard explaining that he doesn't have proof of insurance for the Mercedes-Benz he is driving because he had not purchased the vehicle yet. After Slager goes back to his vehicle, Scott can be seen trying to flee the scene, running from his car on foot.

Update: The IndieGogo campaign appears to have been pulled down, likely because of the press attention. And IndieGogo just released this statement: "Our Trust & Safety team regularly conducts verifications and checks and this campaign did not meet their standards."
 
http://www.postandcourier.com/artic...nvestigation-could-follow-ferguson&source=RSS

Federal probe possibilities: North Charleston investigation could follow Ferguson

the U.S. Department of Justice conducts a civil rights investigation prompted by Saturday’s killing of an unarmed black man by a North Charleston police officer, it will likely follow the pattern of other high-profile cases, including the recently completed federal probe in Ferguson, Mo.

In the Ferguson case, the Justice Department launched a two-pronged investigation after a white policeman killed an unarmed black man in August: One into the actions of the shooter, police officer Darren Wilson; and another into allegations of illegal racial profiling on the part of the Ferguson Police Department and other Ferguson agencies.

The Justice Department has traced a similar path in some of the more than 20 investigations into civil rights violations by law enforcement agencies around the nation in the past five years.

In the North Charleston case, a separate investigation into the shooting of 50-year-old Walter L. Scott, who was running away from Patrolman 1st Class Michael T. Slager, might not be seen as necessary as it was in Ferguson. That’s because Slager was charged with murder and jailed three days after the killing. The murder charge came shortly after a video showed Scott running away from Slager as the officer shot at him eight times until the fleeing man’s knees buckled and he collapsed, face down in the dirt, with five bullets in the back.


The Justice Department did not reply to an email inquiry Thursday about whether a civil rights probe would be launched into the North Charleston case or what its procedures would be in such an investigation.

A federal probe could involve possible civil rights violations by Slager in Scott’s killing. And that killing almost certainly would play a part in any larger Justice investigation of long-held resentment that North Charleston police unfairly detain, arrest and harass blacks, black men in particular.

Those sentiments arose out of an effort by North Charleston to curb its unsavory reputation nine years ago as one of America’s most dangerous cities. The city’s police department adopted a policy of aggressive patrolling, zero tolerance of minor violations and seemingly random interviews with residents. The aggressive patrols focused on the city’s highest crime areas, mainly predominately black neighborhoods.

It’s a policy that was credited with a dramatic reduction in crime in New York City. But both there and in North Charleston such police tactics breed resentment and complaints about harassment.

The Post and Courier investigated such allegations against North Charleston in 2012.

The newspaper discovered that in the four years after 2008, when the department’s aggressive tactics reached full swing, 120 complaints were filed. The newspaper found that “of the 89 that indicated the race of the complainant and the primary officer involved, 62 percent were black people complaining about white officers.”


Nevertheless, Mayor Keith Summey and then-Police Chief Jon Zumalt insisted that the tactics worked.

They said the effort had cut murders, rapes, robberies and aggravated assaults in 20 targeted neighborhoods by almost two-thirds, and by 2010 the number of killings fell to five.

Summey said at the time that the aggressive enforcement focus on black communities was logical because 83 percent of all people arrested are black, even though only 47 percent of the city’s population is black.

Black community leaders say that aggressive enforcement remains largely unchanged. And that likely would be the focus of any civil rights investigation of the North Charleston’s Police Department.

In the case of Ferguson, a Justice Department report says it spent about 100 days observing police and court practices, and attending some sessions of municipal court. The department analyzed police data on stops, searches and arrests, and evaluated court data. It also met with neighborhood associations and advocacy groups, and interviewed city, police and court officials, including the Ferguson police chief and his command staff.

Last month, the Justice Department announced its findings:

In the case of Officer Darren Wilson who killed Michael Brown, the department said the evidence “does not support federal civil rights charges” against him.

But Justice officials found that “the Ferguson Police Department ... engaged in a pattern or practice of conduct that violates the First, Fourth, and 14th amendments of the Constitution.

The report also found that the town focused police and court efforts more on collecting money than public safety.

Justice and Ferguson officials now are working to institute necessary changes.

That’s similar to the agreements the Justice Department has made with 15 of the other law enforcement agencies it has investigated, including the New Orleans and Albuquerque police departments.
 
So let me get this straight: the state's going for a 1st degree murder charge when the officer didn't plan i.e •Premeditated, intentional to kill Mr Scott ?. Yeah he's getting off but if they would had pressed 2nd degree murder i.e •A death caused by a reckless disregard for human life then his ass would be cooked for sure.

(Edit: No one knows the exact degree of murder the state has charged Slager with. People assume it's gonna be 1st degree)
 
http://www.postandcourier.com/article/20150410/PC16/150419954&source=RSS

Man files lawsuit in another Taser incident involving officer who shot Walter Scott

A man who said he was shot in the back with a stun gun by former police officer Michael Slager while other officers held him down filed a lawsuit Friday in what could be the first of a wave of civil complaints against the North Charleston Police Department.

Garnett Wilson, 35, said Slager shot him in the back as other North Charleston officers had him pinned to the ground during a 2014 traffic stop.

The complaint, on top of Slager being charged with murder this week in the shooting death of fleeing motorist Walter Scott, is likely to be just the beginning of the lawsuits the city will face, legal experts say.

“People are angry and, as with this same officer and others, it may be justified,” Charleston School of Law professor Miller Shealy said Friday.

Not every case of alleged abuse will end up in a courtroom, Shealy said, pointing to the availability of witnesses and also the statute of limitations. But the fact that people in the community have faced “real or perceived” instances of abuse, it should put North Charleston on notice, he said.

Dashboard camera video showed the confrontation on Aug. 25 between Wilson, Slager and other officers, according to the lawsuit in the Court of Common Pleas in Charleston.

Wilson’s attorney, John Gentry III of Charleston, said in the filing that his client had his hands above his head and wasn’t resisting the officers as they held him to the pavement.

But as two officers prepared to handcuff Wilson, Slager stood over the man and told the others, “Watch out! I’m going to tase!”

Wilson writhed in pain after Slager fired the Taser. He was arrested that day on a charge of driving with a suspended license, but the count was later dropped, according to the court paperwork.

The filing alleged federal civil rights claims and violations of state laws. In addition to the officers, the suit also names the North Charleston Police Department and Chief Eddie Driggers. Gentry declined further comment Friday.

It alleged that officials did nothing to further investigate Wilson’s ordeal because they have an “unwritten policy of simply looking the other way” and are “indifferent to the past and current improper behavior of NCPD officers such as Slager.”

“This ‘looking the other way’ by the ‘powers that be’ within the NCPD and the city,” the suit stated, “fostered an environment where improper and unconscious conduct was condoned, tolerated and/or emboldened by” Driggers and other policymakers. A city police spokesman declined comment.

At the time of the run-in, Wilson did not file an internal complaint. He has a history of driving with a suspended license and convictions for resisting arrest and a drug offense in 2008.

North Charleston will be in court on another traffic case later this week involving a black motorist and a white officer.

A hearing is set in the federal complaint in which a decorated soldier is suing the North Charleston Police Department claiming an officer unnecessarily deployed his stun gun on him after a traffic stop four years ago. Brian Knite Yates, 28, of Ladson, claims he was wrongfully arrested and assaulted, and his civil rights were violated by North Charleston police officer Christopher Terry, a charge the department’s attorney denies.
 
That Murder 1 charge isn't gonna stick. Remember, he used a taser first.

That DoJ civil rights charge probably isn't going to stick either.

The DA always fucking this up.
 
Mister B.;7948954 said:
The family doesn't want Rev. Rollo (Al Sharpton) at the funeral....

Link

'We don't want another Ferguson circus': Walter Scott family 'bar Rev Al Sharpton from the funeral to avoid over-the-top attention'

Rev Al Sharpton was vocal after Michael Brown was shot in Ferguson

He was criticized for stirring up rage as Missouri city was hit by violence

Family of father-of-four Walter Scott are planning relatives-only memorial service at home in North Charleston, South Carolina

His killing has grabbed national attention after video emerged showing white officer Michael Slager shooting him in the back

New video from Slager's car shows no violent conflict before Scott ran off

Another new video shows two officers arriving and not giving CPR

Good. Not a fan of Sharpton
 
I assume just cuz the indictment is Murder 1.. Murder isn't going to be completely off the table.. The Jury will go not guilty on the murder 1 charge and simply find him guilty of the murder 2. At least that is the hope.. I just hope this one goes the right way..
 
movingfeet;7949553 said:
So let me get this straight: the state's going for a 1st degree murder charge when the officer didn't plan i.e •Premeditated, intentional to kill Mr Scott ?. Yeah he's getting off but if they would had pressed 2nd degree murder i.e •A death caused by a reckless disregard for human life then his ass would be cooked for sure.

(Edit: No one knows the exact degree of murder the state has charged Slager with. People assume it's gonna be 1st degree)

Thats how george Zimmerman got off in Trayvons murder: He was overcharged
 
http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-south-carolina-slager-20150411-story.html#page=1

South Carolina cop charged in shooting is 'wonderful person,' mother says

Karen Sharpe on Friday visited her son, Michael, under circumstances no mother would ever want to endure.

She saw Michael T. Slager, a former police officer charged with murder, from behind a glass prison partition. He wore a black-and-white striped prison uniform. He tried to smile for her and asked for photos of his family.

Sharpe pressed her hand against the partition, directly across from her son's hand. It was as close to him as permitted in Sharpe's first face-to face meeting since he was charged with shooting a man in North Charleston, S.C., after a traffic stop Saturday.

"He looked so tired and so worn," Sharpe said after the visit at the Charleston County Detention Center.


Ever since Slager, 33, fired eight shots into the back of Walter L. Scott, a 50-year-old distribution company worker, the lives of both families have been devastated.

Walter Scott Sr. and his wife, Judy, lost a son. In a way, Karen Sharpe has lost hers too.

"There is pain for both families," Sharpe said. "I wouldn't want anybody to go through this."

Sharpe has had no contact with the Scott family. She has made a point of not watching or reading the news. But she said she wants the Scotts to know that she is praying for them.

"I know how I feel," she said. "How can his mother feel? I think about them constantly. I pray for them. I'm so sorry for their loss."

Told that the Scott family is praying for her family, Sharpe choked back tears. She said she had worried about how they would view her family.

"This whole situation," she said. She couldn't finish her thought. She tried to smile. "It can't get any worse, I hope."

She said she has not watched the video of her son shooting Scott. She doesn't intend to.

Michael's wife, Jamie, 34, told her about the video on Tuesday, when she called Sharpe at her Florida home to tell her Michael had been arrested. The couple are expecting their first child together in May.

"I don't want people to think I'm naive, but I don't want to watch it," Sharpe said of the video. "I don't think I could."

She worries about her daughter-in-law and about Michael's young son and stepdaughter, Jamie's children from a previous marriage.

"Jamie is just so stressed," she said. "It's like she's facing a wall."

She said Jamie Slager saw her husband in person for the first time since the shooting Friday, accompanying her mother-in-law on the prison visit.

Sharpe said she can't reconcile the loving, caring son and father she knows with the violent crime he is accused of committing.

"This is not Michael," she said. "He's not a person who snaps at people or makes snap decisions. He's a wonderful person, a wonderful son, such a good father."


Slager grew up in Alaska, Virginia and New Jersey, the son of a military man who was divorced from Sharpe when Slager was in high school. He later joined the Coast Guard.

Slager served six years from 2003 to 2009, mostly in Florida, where he worked with the local sheriff's department in search and seizure operations.

That drew him to law enforcement, his mother said, and he attended the police academy in Charleston after a friend suggested he move to the area.

Slager joined the North Charleston police force more than five years ago. His personnel file shows that, except for a 2013 excessive force allegation for which he was later cleared, he earned positive marks during firearms qualifications and was praised by a training officer after one of his first nights on patrol.

In March 2010, the officer lauded Slager for his handling of a potentially dangerous drug arrest.

"Officer Slager demonstrated great officer safety tactics when we encountered three individuals, one being armed with a handgun and narcotics. He kept calm through the situation, controlled suspect and he was apprehended," the report read.

Slager, who was trained in first aid and CPR, also received a perfect score during training on the use of a Taser, or stun gun, the weapon that apparently failed to stop Scott shortly before the fatal shooting.

In the shooting incident, the video shows Slager jogging to pick up his Taser moments after shooting Scott, and then is seen dropping the object next to Scott's body.

Civil rights activists alleged Slager was planting evidence to make it appear that Scott had taken the weapon.

The excessive force allegation stemmed from a 2013 complaint by a suspect, Mario Givens, that he was "tased for no reason" and slammed to the ground by Slager. Givens said Slager mistook him for Givens' brother, the object of a police search.

A lawyer for Givens said Thursday that he intended to sue the city.

John Blackmon, president of the Tri-County Fraternal Order of Police in North Charleston, said Saturday's shooting has rankled cops who have watched unrest unfold in Ferguson, Mo., New York City and Cleveland, and now fear their city will be caught up in the rising tide of mistrust aimed at police nationwide.

"Our organization is concerned. We're starting to see people painting the law enforcement profession with broad strokes," Blackmon said. "It's very disheartening to see people stooping to this level."

Slager is not a member of the union, but Blackmon, a retired police officer from Hanahan, said he's spoken with several North Charleston police who are upset with Slager's actions and what he described as a negative atmosphere fostered by the protests.

"They're angry at the officer. They're angry at the protests. They're angry at the situation at hand," Blackmon said, "They're concerned that their safety is going to be in jeopardy."


A prosecutor in Charleston said Friday that she planned to take Slager's case before a grand jury as early as May 4.

Sharpe said her son has received strong support from friends on the North Charleston police force. His sisters, 25, and 31, have traveled to see him, improving his spirits, his mother said.

When she first learned of Scott's death, she said, she thought of families devastated by another shooting death: of Michael Brown at the hands of a police officer in Ferguson last year.

"If people only knew that in an instant your life can change," Sharpe said, "and it will never go back the way it was."

Sharpe said she worried about her son every day because of the inherent dangers of police work. He loved his job, she said. They spoke about it often, she said, "but we never talked about the bad side."

Every time they spoke, she said, she offered a little prayer for him and told him, "Be safe."

Her son always assured her: "I am. I am."

lalaurie-white-tears.gif
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/11/u...nd-protest-in-walter-scott-shooting.html?_r=0

North Charleston Prepares for Mourning and Protest in Walter Scott Shooting

NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — In a ritual that has been repeated around the country after racially charged police killings, this working-class city was preparing Friday for a weekend of public mourning and angry protest over the death of an unarmed black man who was shot in the back by a white police officer.

The man, Walter L. Scott, 50, a forklift operator, was pulled over last Saturday for a broken brake light. He was shown on a bystander’s video being shot and killed as he ran away from the officer, Michael T. Slager, 33, who has been charged with murder and fired by city officials. Both state and federal officials are investigating the shooting.

On Friday, the National Bar Association, a predominantly African-American legal group, called for the firing and the indictment of a black police officer, Clarence Habersham, who arrived on the scene shortly after the shooting. The group alleges that he filed a false police report and that any other officers who filed false reports should face similar punishment.

In an attempt to escape prosecution and deceive the public, Officer Slager made false statements to numerous North Charleston police officers regarding the incident,” the group said, adding that Officer Habersham “deliberately left material facts out of his report
.” The association is the nation’s oldest and largest legal organization of predominantly black lawyers, judges, educators and law students.

The bar association cited police reports issued hours after the shooting that described the episode as a “traffic stop gone wrong.” And it noted discrepancies between the Police Department’s initial version of events and what was seen on the video.

“The video shows Officer Habersham standing next to Mr. Scott’s body and at times touching and/or examining it,” the association said. “Moments later, Officer Slager drops an object which appears to be a Taser near Mr. Scott’s body. In his report, Officer Habersham does not describe Officer Slager’s actions, but said that he gave aid to Mr. Scott and tried to give directions to the scene.” But the association said there was no evidence on the video that shows that Officer Habersham, or anyone else, administered CPR to Mr. Scott.

In the brief police report he filed after the shooting, Officer Habersham stated that he “attempted to render aid to the victim by applying pressure to the gunshot wounds” and that he directed “the best route for E.M.S. and Fire to take to get to the victim faster.” Other officers wrote in their reports that both first aid and CPR were performed on Mr. Scott before medics arrived.


Passions and tension over the shooting have grown not only among the various groups — police officers, city officials, protesters, civil rights leaders, the victim’s relatives and other African-American residents — but within the groups as well, as city leaders distanced themselves from comments of a white City Council member, Bobby Jameson, that were critical of black protesters.


Relatives, friends and strangers gathered at a viewing service for Mr. Scott at a Charleston funeral chapel on Friday. On Saturday at 11 a.m., a larger crowd is expected to attend Mr. Scott’s funeral at W.O.R.D. Ministries Christian Center, in nearby Summerville. The funeral is open to the public, according to a representative of the funeral home, Fielding Home for Funerals.

On Sunday, the Rev. Al Sharpton will preach about Mr. Scott’s death at Charity Missionary Baptist Church in North Charleston, at a service that both Mayor R. Keith Summey and the police chief, Eddie Driggers, are expected to attend. After the service, Mr. Sharpton will meet privately with Mr. Scott’s family and attend a vigil, a spokeswoman for Mr. Sharpton said.

In a statement Friday morning, Mr. Sharpton, who spoke last year at the funeral for Michael Brown, the black teenager shot and killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo., said there had been no discussion about Mr. Sharpton’s attending the funeral. He disputed a report in The Daily News in New York that quoted an unidentified person close to Mr. Scott’s family saying that the family did not want Mr. Sharpton at the funeral.

North Charleston’s police union, the Fraternal Order of Police, issued a statement on Thursday that, while describing the shooting of Mr. Scott as “beyond comprehension,” criticized protest leaders like Mr. Sharpton, who have focused national attention on police harassment and excessive force in black communities, though the statement did not mention him by name.

“Do not allow the professional race agitators to seize this moment to advance their often self-serving opinions of what is wrong in South Carolina,” read the statement from John C. Blackmon, the president of the union, which represents nearly 700 local, state and federal officers in a three-county area
.


On Friday morning, there were isolated protests near the scene of the shooting, where a few men wore T-shirts reading “Black Lives Matter” and “Stop Killing Us” — two slogans that gained popularity among demonstrators and activists after police killings in Ferguson and on Staten Island.

“I think folks are probably at a heightened state of just disbelief,” said Dot Scott, who lives in North Charleston, serves as the president of the Charleston branch of the N.A.A.C.P., and is one of several black leaders who have accused the police of harassing and racially profiling African-Americans. “People are angry. They’ve finally got the eyes of the nation on a situation we’ve been dealing with for years.”

You gotta love that statement from that pig Union.. Typical propaganda that comes from these unions.. When they got caught red handed doing foul shit.. "There is nothing see here.. Why are these blacks & "professional agitators" upset.. This is an isolated incident there nothing to see here.. This just one bad apple".. Smh...
 

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