Los Angeles Times

Shooting video limits options

Detailed recording eliminates many potential arguments, legal experts say.

- By Richard Winton and Victoria Kim richard.winton@latimes.com Twitter: @lacrimes victoria.kim@latimes.com Twitter: @vicjkim

Detailed recording restricts defense’s strategy, experts say.

other videos in the last year that have shown a law officer shooting an unarmed suspect, the shaky smartphone footage that went viral this week leaves little to the imaginatio­n.

And that, legal experts say, will leave attorneys for Michael T. Slager to build their defense on what happened before a bystander pushed the “on” button, capturing the 33-year-old North Charleston police officer firing eight times at the back of a fleeing man in South Carolina.

Shortly after the video emerged Tuesday, authoritie­s charged Slager with murder. Although hundreds of fatal shootings involving law enforcemen­t officers occur each year, few criminal charges are filed, and murder charges are rare.

Prosecutin­g such cases is typically an uphill battle because of the leeway the law gives to officers in the line of duty.

But veteran lawyers and legal experts say this video’s depiction of the shooting of Walter L. Scott will make the job of the officer’s attorneys much harder.

“You’ve got a very extreme case,” said Franklin Zimring, a UC Berkeley law professor who is writing a book on police shootings. “There are 500 killings by police in the U.S. each year. How many of them are realistic candidates for the criminal conviction of officers? They would be on the fingers of one hand.... This may very well be the one.”

Particular­ly damning for the officer is the legal standard under the 1985 U.S. Supreme Court decision Tennessee vs. Garner, which establishe­d that it is unconsti- tutional to use deadly force against a non-dangerous fleeing suspect only to prevent them from getting away.

Because the video appears to tell the story of the shooting so clearly, experts said defense attorneys for the officer would focus on the minutes before what the footage captures and the officer’s state of mind.

“What other things did the video not capture?” said defense attorney Michael Schwartz, who successful­ly defended a Fullerton police officer charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er and excessive force in the 2011 beating death of a mentally ill homeless man.

On Thursday, state authoritie­s released a video taken by the camera on Slager’s police car. But the dashcam video captures only part of the action when Scott’s car is first stopped.

Schwartz said the law deferred to officers’ judgment if they’re acting in self-defense or in the defense of others.

Defense attorneys, experts said, will probably focus on the interactio­n between Scott and Slager that is not captured on video. This, they said, will leave room for argument on whether the officer may have felt in danger.

Ed Obayashi, an attorney and sheriff ’s deputy in Northern California who is a use-of-force expert, said defense attorneys could also try to make an issue out of how quickly prosecutor­s decided to file murder charges.

“In the wake of Ferguson and other incidents, some may see this as a rush to judgment by the government,” he said, referring to the fatal shooting of an unarmed black man by a white police officer and the subsequent unrest in Ferguson, Mo., last summer.

Criminal conviction­s of officers in shootings are rare across the U.S. An Ohio professor who reviewed nationwide shooting cases between 2005 and 2011 found 28 instances of murder or nonneglige­nt manslaught­er charges filed against officers during the period, of which fewer than half resulted in conviction­s.

In the same period, FBI statistics say, there were more than 2,700 cases of justifiabl­e homicide by law enforcemen­t officers.

The State, a Columbia, S.C.-based newspaper, published an analysis last month reviewing 209 officerinv­olved shootings in the state over five years and found that none resulted in conviction­s of the officer. Only one case went to trial, but ended in a hung jury.

Experts say the South Carolina video may make this case different.

Obayashi said the video showed the entire shooting, leaving no doubt about the sequence of events.

Experts said the hardest part of what’s shown in the video for Slager’s attorneys to argue away before a jury would be the number of shots fired, and what appears to be evidence tampering by the officer after Scott is gunned down.

Slager said in initial statements, and over the police radio, that Scott wrestled with him for his Taser; the video appears to show the officer dropping an object next to Scott’s prone body.

“Of particular concern is why the officer appears to move the Taser from one location to another after the shooting,” said retired Los Angeles Police Capt. Greg Meyer.

Charles “Sid” Heal, a retired Los Angeles County sheriff ’s commander, said there wasn’t much in the video to help the defense. “The man is basically running and never even turns to look. He isn’t zig-zagging, and he’s shot several times in the back.”

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