Business Standard

Pressure mounts on Charlotte police

- ALAN BINDER Charlotte, North Carolina, 24 September

This city’s leaders, faced with mounting demands for transparen­cy after a fatal police shooting of a black man led to rioting, resisted calls on Friday for the immediate release of video of the killing and argued that a rushed disclosure could compromise a criminal inquiry.

The status of the police video of the shooting of Keith Lamont Scott, 43, and the shooting’s circumstan­ces have been debated here for days, and the discussion deepened on Friday, especially after lawyers for Scott’s wife, Rakeyia, released a cellphone video that she took of the episode on Tuesday afternoon.

During a news conference shortly before Scott’s video became public, city officials alternated between declaring their commitment to openness and insisting that no official footage should be released before the conclusion of the inquiry by the State Bureau of Investigat­ion.

The Charlotte police chief, Kerr Putney, warned that hastily distribute­d footage might endanger the city’s wary and fragile peace.

“If I were to put it out indiscrimi­nately, and it doesn’t give you good context, it can inflame the situation and make it even worse,” he said. “It will exacerbate the backlash. It will increase the distrust, so that is where discernmen­t, judgment and reasonable­ness have to come in.”

The chief, who is black, added: “It’s not that I want to hide anything. It’s I want to be more thoughtful and deliberate in delivering the whole story.”

Mayor Jennifer Roberts said the video “should be released,” and in a statement after Scott’s footage began circulatin­g online, she urged the state investigat­ive team “to use every resource at its disposal to get this done and release the informatio­n to the public as quickly as possible.”

The demands of protesters, who have sometimes chanted for the release of the footage, gained traction Friday, even after the city made its public defense. When demonstrat­ors took to Charlotte’s streets on Friday for the fourth consecutiv­e night of protests, they reiterated their plea. Protesters also marched in Atlanta.

Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee for president, said on Twitter that the city should release its footage without delay. Clinton initially planned to visit Charlotte on Sunday, but she postponed her trip after Roberts publicly asked her and Donald J Trump, the Republican nominee, to avoid visiting the city for now.

A spokeswoma­n for Clinton, Jennifer Palmieri, said the trip would be reschedule­d for October 2, “provided circumstan­ces allow.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India