Los Angeles Times

Ex-officer gets 20 years in killing

The white South Carolina policeman shot an unarmed black man in the back.

- By Jenny Jarvie Jarvie is a special correspond­ent.

ATLANTA — Michael Slager, the white former South Carolina police officer who fatally shot an unarmed black man in the back as he fled a traffic stop, was sentenced Thursday to 20 years in prison.

In a rare case of a law enforcemen­t officer being imprisoned for an on-duty shooting, U.S. District Judge David Norton sentenced Slager after ruling that he had committed seconddegr­ee murder when he shot 50-year-old Walter Scott in April 2015.

“This is the day that the Lord has made, and I am rejoicing,” Scott’s mother, Judy Scott, said outside the downtown Charleston courthouse as she clutched a framed photo of her son. “My soul is rejoicing right now.”

The killing was captured on video by a bystander, and civil rights leaders in South Carolina said it proved what many in the black community had long known — that officers used excessive force on African Americans when they thought no one was watching and tried to alter crime scenes to hide their misdeeds.

The video sparked protests nationwide and was held up by the Black Lives Matter movement and other groups as yet another example of police brutality against blacks.

But unlike some highprofil­e cases involving African Americans who died during encounters with police — such as Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner in Staten Island, N.Y. — this case led to criminal charges.

David Harris, a law professor at the University of Pittsburgh who specialize­s in police misconduct, said Thursday’s sentence was unusual, if not unpreceden­ted.

In 1999, a New York City police officer was sentenced to 30 years for sodomizing a black Haitian immigrant with a broomstick in a Brooklyn police station.

“The judge made a pretty powerful statement,” Harris said. “The sentence tells us that this is taken seriously, and maybe some people won’t think it’s justice, but looked at in the universe of police shootings, with officers so rarely charged, it is significan­t.”

In May, Slager, 36, pleaded guilty in federal court to violating Scott’s civil rights by unjustly shooting him five times. As part of the plea agreement, prosecutor­s dropped state murder charges. Slager’s murder trial in state court ended in a mistrial last December after a deadlocked jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict.

“We started at the beginning trusting in the justice system, and today we made history getting justice,” said Scott’s brother, Rodney Scott. “My heart goes out to all the families that didn’t get justice, and there’s a still a lot of work to be done.”

Standing with the family, attorney L. Chris Stewart celebrated “a historic day for civil rights, particular­ly in officer-involved shootings,” and expressed hope that Slager’s sentencing would “make the next officer think one second longer before pulling that trigger.”

“All people crave is accountabi­lity,” Stewart said. “People want accountabi­lity because when you have none, you have hopelessne­ss, you have apathy, you have anger.

“Don’t think this was given to us just because there’s a video,” he added. “Videos do not get you justice anymore. Anger and bricks do not get you justice. Determinat­ion, prayer, faith and being the forefront of a family like this and never giving up gets you justice.”

In a statement after Norton handed down the sentence, Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions said law enforcemen­t officers who violated citizens’ rights also violated their oaths of honor and tarnished the names of the vast majority of their fellow officers.

“Those who enforce our laws must also abide by them — and this Department of Justice will hold accountabl­e anyone who violates the civil rights of our fellow Americans,” he said in a statement. “On behalf of the Department of Justice, I want to offer my condolence­s to the Scott family and loved ones.”

“This is an important day for our community,” Solicitor Scarlett A. Wilson, who prosecuted Slager in the state trial, said in a statement. “We give police officers an incredible amount of power. With that great power comes great accountabi­lity. If we do not hold officers accountabl­e for their crimes, our criminal justice system will fall apart, and we will live in chaos.”

In urging for a lighter sentence, Slager’s defense attorneys argued that the former North Charleston police officer shot Scott in self-defense after Scott reached for Slager’s stun gun. His actions did not amount to murder, but voluntary manslaught­er, they argued.

The incident began April 4, 2015, when Slager pulled Scott over for a broken brake light. For reasons that are unclear, Scott ran off. After deploying his stun gun, Slager fired eight bullets at Scott as he ran away.

Scott was struck in the back four times and a fifth round grazed his ear. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

According to incident reports from other officers, Slager said over the radio, “Shots fired and the subject is down. He took my Taser.”

Slager was not charged with murder until a few days after the shooting, when a bystander released a grainy cellphone video that showed Scott was at least 17 feet away from the officer when Slager shot him in the back. Moments later, Slager picked up his stun gun and dropped it next to Scott.

 ?? Photograph­s by Grace Beahm Alford Charleston Post and Courier ?? JUDY AND WALTER Scott Sr., whose son Walter Scott was killed during a traffic stop in North Charleston, S.C., in 2015, leave court after the sentencing.
Photograph­s by Grace Beahm Alford Charleston Post and Courier JUDY AND WALTER Scott Sr., whose son Walter Scott was killed during a traffic stop in North Charleston, S.C., in 2015, leave court after the sentencing.
 ??  ?? FORMER Officer Michael Slager testifies in 2016. A legal expert called his sentence “significan­t.”
FORMER Officer Michael Slager testifies in 2016. A legal expert called his sentence “significan­t.”

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