World

Walter Scott shooting: Man who recorded video called 'hero' by family lawyer

A young man whose cellphone video put a South Carolina police officer in jail on a murder charge said Wednesday that he gave the recording to the dead man's family because if it was his relative who was killed, he "would have liked to know the truth."

North Charleston, S.C., police officers to be equipped with body cameras

Reaction to Scott Shooting

10 years ago
Duration 4:45
Video shows Walter Scott was shot in the back while running away from police

A young man whose cellphone video put a South Carolina police officer in jail on a murder charge said Wednesday that he gave the recording to the dead man's family because if it was his relative who was killed, he "would have liked to know the truth."

Feidin Santana told NBC News that while walking to work, he noticed police officer Michael Thomas Slager controlling Walter Lamer Scott on the ground, and began recording when he heard the sound of a Taser. "Mr. Scott was trying just to get away from the Taser," Santana said.

But I think that he made a bad decision. And you pay for your decisions in this life, I think.— Feidin Santana on police officer Michael Thomas Slager

Slager initially claimed he fired in self-defence after the suspect he had pulled over for a broken brake light grabbed his Taser.

Santana's recording documented a different scenario. It begins at a moment when both men are standing, as Scott pulls away from the officer and an object appearing to be a stun gun falls to the ground, trailing wires. As the unarmed man runs away, Slager then pulls out his Glock pistol and fires eight times at the back of the 50-year-old man, until he crumples to the ground about nine metres away.

After the video was made public Tuesday by a lawyer for the dead man's family, Slager, 33, was swiftly charged with murder and fired, and a judge ordered him jailed without bond on the charge that could carry a sentence of 30 years to life in prison.

But that did little to quell the outrage of an angry crowd at North Charleston's city hall, where the mayor and police chief were shouted down with calls of "no justice, no peace."

Not once in the moments recorded by Santana can the officer be heard yelling "stop" or telling the man to surrender.

Moments after handcuffing the dying man face-down on the ground, Slager walks back to pick up what appears to be the Taser, then returns and drops it at Scott's feet as another officer arrives to check the dying man's condition. Then he picks it up again after exchanging words with the other officer.

Video changed everything

The video changed everything, authorities and advocates said Wednesday.

"What if there was no video? What if there was no witness, or 'hero' as I call him, to come forward?" the Scott family's lawyer, L. Chris Stewart, told The Associated Press. "We didn't know he existed. He came out the blue."

A memorial is placed near the site where Walter Scott was killed in North Charleston, S.C. (Chuck Burton/Associated Press )

Mayor Keith Summey announced that he's ordering 150 more body cameras so that every uniformed officer on the street will wear one, a key demand of the Black Lives Matter movement that is growing nationwide. For his part, police Chief Eddie Driggers said, "I have watched the video. And I was sickened by what I saw. And I have not watched it since."

Their news conference was meant to quiet the uproar, but both were interrupted with shouted questions they said they could not answer, since the investigation was turned over to state law enforcement.

The video also prompted the FBI and the Justice Department's civil rights prosecutors to announce a federal probe Wednesday. At the White House, spokesman Josh Earnest said the video is "awfully hard to watch" and said he wouldn't be surprised if President Barack Obama has seen it, "given the amount of media attention that this issue has received."

Outside city hall, local organizer Muhiydin D'Baha repeatedly hollered, "Eight shots in the back!" through a bullhorn. The crowd yelled, "In the back!" in response, aiming to coin a new phrase to supplant the "Hands up, don't shoot!" refrain that grew out of other officer-involved killings.

But Stewart appealed to keep protests peaceful, saying any violence will undo the family's success so far in making the system work. He also plans to sue the police department, which he accused of acting decisively only because the video exposed what really happened.

Coast guard veterans

Investigators also are reviewing a police dashcam video that may show the beginnings of the traffic stop, police said, and audio of the police radio traffic revealed the sounds of Slager breathing heavily as he chases Scott into the empty lot and calls for backup, among other things. A passenger in Scott's car also was detained, according to the police reports.

The black police officer who appears in the video checking the dying man's condition, Clarence Habersham, made no mention of Slager or any of his actions in his brief official incident report, according to a copy obtained by the AP.

Months or years have passed in many other police-involved shootings before accused officers are fired, and few face criminal charges. Nationwide protests intensified after grand juries declined to indict police in the killings of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner on Staten Island, N.Y.

But the swift action in this case did not satisfy Lance Braye, a 23-year-old demonstrator who hopes the video will help people understand that even officers can lie to save themselves when they do wrong.

"All you have to do is look at the story that was told before the video came out," Braye said.

Scott had four children, was engaged and had been honourably discharged from the U.S. Coast Guard, with no violent offences on his record, Stewart said. He worked at a trucking distribution centre, and may have feared being jailed for being behind on child support payments, his family said.

Slager also was a coast guard veteran, and his wife is eight months pregnant, the mayor said, which is why the city will keep paying the family's health insurance premiums despite his firing.

Santana, who has been co-operating with investigators, acknowledged that "the officer also has his family."

"But I think that he made a bad decision. And you pay for your decisions in this life, I think," Santana said.