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Why I’m Not Convinced Michael Slager Is a Cold-Blooded Killer
Pajamas Media ^ | 04/14/2015 | Jack Dunphy

Posted on 04/14/2015 8:51:14 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Unlike many people you have heard opine on the Walter Scott shooting, I have been in Slager’s shoes.

walter_scott_big_4-13-15-1

A ribbon with the image of Walter Scott is affixed to the fence with a message at the scene where Scott was fatally shot by a police officer after he fled a traffic stop, Sunday, April 12, 2015, in North Charleston, S.C. The officer, Michael Thomas Slager, has been fired and charged with murder. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Regular readers of these columns [1] know that I often use this space to explain and defend the actions of police officers who I feel have been unfairly vilified after being involved in some controversial incident. In the case of Michael Slager, the now-former North Charleston police officer accused of murder in the shooting death of Walter Scott, I can offer no defense, for it is abundantly clear that in firing at a fleeing, unarmed man he broke the law. So the question is not whether Slager was right or wrong, but rather how wrong he was.

I have been a cop for more than 30 years, the better part of that time working in some of Los Angeles’s most crime-ridden neighborhoods. Though I’ve never fired my weapon at anyone, I’ve come within a split second of doing so on a number of occasions. I’ve been shot at twice, both times mercifully without effect. I’ve chased dozens of people down streets and alleys and over fences and from backyard to backyard, and I’ve been involved in altercations in which men tried to take my gun. Unlike many people you have heard opine on the Walter Scott shooting, I have been in Michael Slager’s shoes. He made a series of poor decisions, the most consequential of course being his decision to open fire on Scott, but I am not convinced he is a cold-blooded killer.

Consider: if Slager had been looking for an excuse to kill Scott (or anyone), if he had formed the malicious intent to shoot him in the back and then justify it by placing his Taser near the body, why did he wait until he had chased the man for more than the length of two football fields before doing so?

A more likely explanation for the shooting is that Slager was unprepared — mentally or physically — for an encounter with a resisting individual. When that encounter came, he panicked and fired out of mistaken but not altogether unreasonable fear that he would be harmed if he did not. And then he panicked further and compounded his mistake by handling and moving evidence that might have bolstered whatever slim claim to justification he might have had.

Before getting to the shooting itself, let’s examine the circumstances that preceded it and how Slager might have avoided the tragic outcome. As the dash-cam from Slager’s police car [2] shows, the incident began with a traffic stop for the most minor of offenses: a defective brake light, in this case the one mounted in the car’s rear window. The video clearly shows the light isn’t working, so this is not a case of a police officer manufacturing a reason for a stop. If the violation seems trivial to you, keep in mind that stops for minor offenses can and often do uncover far more serious lawbreaking.

But in watching the video we can see that as Slager speaks with Scott, there is no indication that he has any suspicions about him, even as Scott gives varying accounts as to who owns the car he is driving. Scott at first says he has just bought it, then later says he is preparing to do so. In any event, he does not produce the registration and insurance papers he is required by law to possess. Slager makes no issue of this, but he takes Scott’s driver’s license back to his car, presumably to verify via the car’s computer that the license is valid and to check Scott for outstanding warrants.

And Scott did have a warrant [3] for the relatively minor offense of failing to pay child support; he was more than $18,000 behind on his payments on the day he was killed. But we don’t know if Slager had discovered the warrant at the time Scott broke from his car and ran down the street. When someone flees from a routine stop, an officer is presented with a series of choices, choices that are complicated when the officer is working alone as Slager was. Assume that Slager had discovered the outstanding warrant. I submit it was an unwise choice to give chase as he did, especially with a passenger still in Scott’s car who had been neither identified nor searched. Had that passenger been armed and so inclined, he could have shot Slager in the back as the officer ran past. And given the minor nature of the charge on the warrant, and the fact that Slager had Scott’s driver’s license, wouldn’t it have been preferable to let Scott get away for the time being and pick him up later? It certainly would have been preferable to what actually occurred.

But if Slager was determined to pursue, why didn’t he stay in his car and drive after Scott for as long as possible, thus saving his wind for the altercation that almost always occurs at the end of a foot pursuit? Slager could have driven into the lot where the shooting occurred, headed Scott off, and been better able to wrestle with a man who had run the same distance. And by leaving his car in the parking lot, presumably with the keys in it and running, Slager ran the risk that someone would steal it (yes [4], it happens [5]).

And even if Slager was right to pursue Scott on foot, it would have been wiser to keep him in sight but at a distance while waiting for backup to arrive. As can be heard from the siren in the opening moments of the shooting video [6], help was near. Why not wait those few seconds it might take for help to arrive and improve your chance of success? Indeed, an officer arrived at the scene just moments after Slager shot Scott, and he came from a direction that would have allowed him to intercept Scott had he continued running as he was.

Had Slager chosen any of these options, today Walter Scott would be alive and Slager himself would be every bit as unknown to the world as he was at the moment he found himself on Remount Road and behind a 1990 Mercedes with a broken brake light.

But now to the shooting itself.

I’m in no way suggesting that witness Feidin Santana planned it this way when he shot the video, but the video is timed precisely to show that portion of the incident most damning to Slager. As the video opens we can hear the sound of a siren and that of a Taser being activated. We hear a voice, presumably Slager’s, saying something inaudible, followed by “I’ll shoot you.” When Slager and Scott come into view, at about 0:17 into the video, the two are an arm’s length apart, with Scott appearing to turn away and Slager reaching for his holstered pistol. The Taser wires, which connect the device to two darts fired from it, can be seen extending between Scott and Slager, and the Taser itself can be seen landing on the ground five to six feet behind Slager. Feidin Santana has said that Scott did not grab the Taser, but if he didn’t, how else to explain how it ended up on the ground behind Slager?

I suspect that Slager’s defense will be to claim that Scott did indeed grab the Taser, a claim not entirely unreasonable given where the device landed before the shooting. And I suspect he moved the Taser in a panicked attempt to bring the evidence into conformance with his mistaken perception of what had occurred. If a suspect gains control of an officer’s Taser and is preparing to use it against him, deadly force can be justified in defense. But once the threat has ended, so too must the use of deadly force. I think when Slager drew his weapon, he truly believed Scott still had the Taser. He had made the decision to fire, and he was unable to process the change in circumstances that made the use of deadly force unreasonable and therefore unlawful.

And this is where Scott all but shredded his only potential defense. If he had left the crime scene undisturbed, if he had allowed the evidence to speak for itself, any presence of Scott’s DNA on the Taser could only be explained by his having grabbed it as Slager claimed. As things now stand, if Scott’s DNA is found on the Taser, prosecutors can argue it was transferred by Slager’s handling of it after handcuffing Scott. In acting as he did, Slager not only destroyed his own credibility, he tainted the very forensic evidence that might have supported his already weak claim of self-defense.

Whatever Slager’s crimes, there is still a moral distinction to be made between a cop who errs, even as catastrophically as he did, and someone who kills in the course of a robbery or a gang feud or some other act of depravity. When the process has run its course, he will have earned the punishment the law prescribes for him. He has tarnished the police profession and made our job more difficult, but I cannot bring myself to hate him.

It took less than three seconds for Michael Slager to fire those eight rounds at Walter Scott’s back. In so short a time, one life was ended, another was forever ruined. And now the sad story is a cautionary tale for police officers everywhere. Slager learned this too late, but sometimes a cop has to stop and think, and sometimes he has to watch a guy run away.



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: michaelslager; police; shooting; walterscott
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To: El Cid
This is why the police charged him with murder after watching the video.

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21 posted on 04/14/2015 9:44:05 AM PDT by ansel12
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To: Cecily

RE: Are police officers supposed to use all means necessary to stop someone who is running away?

If the one running away is violent and is judged to be a grave danger to the community, yes, the officer has to stop the man.

In the case of Walter Scott, all indicators look like he isn’t one. Also, there’s no need to give chase. The officer has the car and its registration and plate number. They can always find Walter Scott from the information they have.


22 posted on 04/14/2015 9:44:25 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: Gaffer
LE has no duty to ‘protect’ you.

Good thing because it seems more and more that we need protection from them.

23 posted on 04/14/2015 9:47:59 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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To: CharlesOConnell

They CAN’T cooperate with the police because they’re committing crimes. Did it ever occur to them to OBEY the law?


24 posted on 04/14/2015 9:48:23 AM PDT by FrdmLvr ("WE ARE ALL OSAMA, 0BAMA!" al-Qaeda terrorists who breached the American compound in Benghazi)
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To: DoodleDawg

Well. I certainly don’t trust them and I will not put my life in their hands, that’s for sure.


25 posted on 04/14/2015 9:49:20 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: ansel12

Look at the little black dot at the victim’s feet just to the right. It’s the taser head attached to wires in the victim’s clothing or body. Also, take a look at what’s on the ground to the left of the officer who is in a range-shooting stance. Murder.


26 posted on 04/14/2015 9:51:46 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: Gaffer
Well. I certainly don’t trust them and I will not put my life in their hands, that’s for sure.

Unfortunately it's a small minority who are ruining it for the overwhelming majority of cops who do a good job day after day.

27 posted on 04/14/2015 9:59:22 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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To: DoodleDawg

I guess I could see your point if I had a personal standpoint from which to agree. I have only informed reporting, from both reliable and not. The preponderance here lately is not sympathetic to your thought I think.

My personal experience with LE is mixed. Some good (principally in my own small little town with officers who largely carry Model 10-like revolvers and the insane Rambos who infested the county in which I used to live)...

By and large I am not going to depend on them or anyone else to treat me as a citizen vs a subject I think. We have far, far too many psychos in LE.


28 posted on 04/14/2015 10:06:49 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: SeekAndFind
In the case of Walter Scott, all indicators look like he isn’t one. Also, there’s no need to give chase. The officer has the car and its registration and plate number. They can always find Walter Scott from the information they have.

"Finding the perp later" doesn't work. A perp who resists and runs from a cop in the present will of course do it again later.

That's not to defend Slager's shooting. Just trying to point out what a tough job cops have.

29 posted on 04/14/2015 10:09:09 AM PDT by FreeReign
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To: Theophilus
Why is the fact that Scott was "unarmed" relevant?

For a guy who is armed and who is resisting, the fact that he is armed is indeed relevant.

30 posted on 04/14/2015 10:11:16 AM PDT by FreeReign
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To: SeekAndFind

The manner in which Slager calmly shot the unarmed man makes me wonder how many times in his career he has gotten away with this same thing.

In a previous thread someone claimed that the officer was justified in shooting him because Scott reached for the officer’s gun. I wonder if Slager thinks that action is all it takes to warrant a death sentence, even though he guy ran away.


31 posted on 04/14/2015 10:16:01 AM PDT by webstersII
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To: DoodleDawg

Did Slager set out to kill Scott? No

Actually I think he did when he stated “I will shoot you” as scott was running away, And then he shot him.That would be pre- meditated.


32 posted on 04/14/2015 10:20:30 AM PDT by eastforker (Cruz for steam in 2016)
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To: ansel12

SLED said that from the beginning they did not believe the cop’s story. The facts did not match the crime scene. Then, the man came forward with the video.


33 posted on 04/14/2015 10:22:31 AM PDT by sport
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To: SeekAndFind
I wonder if this will reach the point that I recall witnessing in 1992 regarding the Rodney king beating.

I recall tuning into the trial once on live television and the defense was showing the video footage of the beating in ultra-slow motion and were explaining to the jury that they were NOT BEATING Rodney King, but simply using force to RESTRAIN King.

They could've fooled me.. because that's NOT what I SAW.

My point: we ALL saw the candid video of a man SHOT in the BACK FIVE times while running away.

Officer Slager had already commandeered Walter Scott's car, had his drivers license. and knew who he was. Just pick him up later and add another charge for his running off.

There was NO NEED whatsoever to SHOOT another human being in the back who was NOT a THREAT to the officer.

Officer Slager's own decision to BOTH SHOOT and to TAMPER with the EVIDENCE have sealed his own fate.

34 posted on 04/14/2015 10:33:06 AM PDT by VideoDoctor
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To: RedStateRocker
I'm against using deadly force merely for what someone "might" do. I'd listen to an argument about what someone is likely to do. Anybody "might" do anything.

Armed ≠ Dangerous.

35 posted on 04/14/2015 10:37:00 AM PDT by Theophilus (Be as prolific as you are pro-life.)
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To: FreeReign
If he happens to have a holstered or concealed firearm and is running away is it OK to shoot him in the back?

On the other hand:

A police officer may not seize an unarmed, nondangerous suspect by shooting him dead...however...Where the officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others, it is not constitutionally unreasonable to prevent escape by using deadly force. —Justice Byron White, Tennessee v. Garner[3]

36 posted on 04/14/2015 10:44:07 AM PDT by Theophilus (Be as prolific as you are pro-life.)
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To: VideoDoctor
Officer Slager had already commandeered Walter Scott's car, had his drivers license. and knew who he was. Just pick him up later and add another charge for his running off.

Letting him run off is not a workable strategy.

With that kind of strategy, the perp could keep running every time he is confronted. The correct strategy I believe is for the single officer to follow the perp until reinforcements arrive. At that point they still must catch, tackle and cuff him.

37 posted on 04/14/2015 10:45:33 AM PDT by FreeReign
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To: CharlesOConnell
Does it ever occur to this community that you should actually cooperate with Police, instead of always fighting them? Police Officers are human beings, too, and surely would appreciate civil treatment.

that is well and good too. But, from I have seen from watching shows like COPS , they do not think that we are human beings. To them, we are just criminals that have not been caught yet. Or, as in the case of the two Mexican ladies delivering newspapers and the kid going surfing, targets.

38 posted on 04/14/2015 10:49:57 AM PDT by sport
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To: SeekAndFind

It wasn’t muder.

But it wasn’t a good shoot.

The courts will decide.


39 posted on 04/14/2015 10:54:54 AM PDT by Vermont Lt (When you are inclined to to buy storage boxes, but contractor bags instead.)
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To: FreeReign

If police departments had more funds, they could patrol with more K-9s to help them chase down people who run away, or just act as a deterrent to people who might be thinking about running away during a stop.


40 posted on 04/14/2015 11:23:17 AM PDT by Cecily
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