Video shows white police officer Michael Slager shooting 50-year-old black man Walter Scott in the back at least eight times as he ran away

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

A white police officer in South Carolina has been charged with the murder of a 50-year-old black man shot eight times in the back as he ran away.

Footage of the shooting, which occurred at about 9.30am on Saturday after Walter Scott was pulled over for a traffic violation, shows North Charleston officer Michael Slager firing eight times at Scott. Slager initially told police he shot Scott because he feared for his life while the two fought over Slager’s stun gun.

Michael Slager’s booking photo. Photograph: Charleston County sheriff's office

After Scott is shot, the video also appears to show the police officer picking an object off the ground and dropping it next to Scott’s body. Scott does not appear in possession of the stun gun at any point in the video.

The footage was posted online by Charleston’s Post & Courier on Tuesday, and filmed by an anonymous bystander. It appears to show that a stun gun wire has already been deployed, but falls out as Scott runs away from Slager, who pulls out his firearm and shoots until Scott falls to the ground. The officer then walks over to the body and appears to talk into his radio. He reaches the body and shouts: “Put your hands behind your back now, put your hands behind your back”. Scott is motionless, his face down in the ground.

The officer then appears to shout “Put your hands behind your back” again before picking up Scott’s limp arms and placing them in what look like handcuffs.

Slager then moves away from the body and picks up an item from the ground, near where he fired the shots. At this point another officer arrives on the scene and stands over Scott’s body.

Slager walks back over to the body and appears to drop the item he has picked up next to Scott’s body.

According to an incident file, reported by local TV news, Slager said over the radio that he deployed his Taser and “seconds later” he said: “Shots fired and the subject is down. He took my Taser.”

Neither officer appears to be aware they are being filmed, and the cameraperson seems to place his finger over the lens a number of times. It does not appear that Slager checks Scott’s pulse until three minutes and three seconds into the film.

Slager had initially released a statement through his lawyer, claiming he had “followed all the proper procedures and policies of the North Charleston police department”.

But at a press conference on Tuesday, North Charleston mayor Keith Summey told reporters that Slager had made a “bad decision”.

“When you’re wrong, you’re wrong,” Summey said as quoted by the Post and Courier. “When you make a bad decision, don’t care if you’re behind the shield or a citizen on the street, you have to live with that decision.”

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The North Charleston police chief, Eddie Driggers, said officer Slager, 33, had been arrested and charged with murder.

Attorney L Chris Stewart, who came to North Charleston a day after the shooting to represent the family, said the video forced authorities to act quickly and decisively, and he called the person who made the video a hero.

“What happened today doesn’t happen all the time,” Stewart told a news conference. “What if there was no video?” Scott’s mother stood nearby, saying, “Thank you, Lord” and “Hallelujah.”

The family plans to file a civil rights suit against Slager, the department and the city, Stewart said.

Scott’s older brother Anthony told the Post & Courier: “We just would like for justice to be taken, for justice to be served, and we would like for the truth to come out so my brother can rest in peace. Whatever happened yesterday, all we want is the truth, and we will go to any length to get it.”



Anthony Scott said his late sibling served for two years in the US Coast Guard, that he was a father of four, and that he loved the Dallas Cowboys.

According to the Post & Courier, Walter Scott had a warrant out for his arrest from a family court at the time of his death.



His arrest history, mostly for contempt of court charges for failing to pay child support, included one accusation of a violation stemming from an assault and battery charge in 1987, the newspaper reported.



A local Black Lives Matter group, formed after the death of unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, last August, has planned a demonstration on Wednesday morning at North Charleston city hall.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division have also launched investigations into Saturday’s shooting.



“The Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the South Carolina US Attorney’s Office will work with the FBI in the investigation. The Department of Justice will take appropriate action in light of the evidence and developments in the state case,” the Justice Department said in a statement.

The murder charges against Slager come amid a national debate on police practice after a spate of high-profile police killings around the country.



President Barack Obama convened a national police taskforce in the wake of the death of Brown in Ferguson, which sparked a wave of unrest in the small city and protests across the country.

The taskforce recommended a variety of criminal justice reforms last month, including that local law enforcement agencies report each officer involved in a shooting to federal government when they occur. At present there are no official national statistics on officers involved in fatalities as local agencies are not required to provide information to the federal government.

Also in South Carolina, a white police officer was charged on Tuesday in the case of a 68-year-old black man who was shot dead last year. A grand jury had earlier chosen to indict North Augusta officer Justin Craven on a charge of misconduct in office, rather than the manslaughter indictment sought by prosecutors, in the February 2014 death of Ernest Satterwhite. The new charge, discharging a gun into an occupied vehicle, is a felony.



Associated Press contributed to this report