A bystander’s video proved pivotal in the filing of a murder charge against a South Carolina police officer, and also rekindled a fervent national discussion about the use of body cameras by police officers.
The White House has seized on the case to make a pitch for wider use of such cameras. So did New York Mayor Bill De Blasio, whose city has experienced wrenching controversies related to police use of force.
And in North Charleston, S.C., where a white police officer fatally shot an unarmed black man in the back, Mayor Keith Summey said that every uniformed officer on patrol will get a body camera. The city already had ordered 101 cameras, and is ordering 150 more in the aftermath of the shooting, the mayor said.
It’s unclear how quickly they will be deployed. Summey said officers have to be trained and a policy for the use of the cameras must be written and approved by lawyers.
In many jurisdictions nationwide, there have been complications and disagreements related to details of such policies. In some states, lawmakers have proposed bills to exempt video recordings of police encounters with citizens from state public records laws, or to limit what can be made public.
Paul Butler, a former federal prosecutor who is now a professor of criminal law at Georgetown, said use of a body camera in North Charleston might possibly have spared the life of 50-year-old Walter Lamer Scott, who was shot and killed Saturday by Patrolman Michael Thomas Slager after a routine traffic stop.
“They make both police and civilians treat each other better, because they know they are being recorded,” Butler said.
In New York City, de Blasio described the South Carolina video as “so disturbing and so painful” and said it fueled his interest in expanding the use of police body cameras in New York.
“We’re seeing things in a different light now that we have so much more video,” he said. “Things in the past that may have been mischaracterized, we’re now seeing very starkly, very honestly. And I believe that will lead to progress.”
In Washington, White House spokesman Josh Earnest suggested that greater use of body cameras could help improve community-police relations.
“Even the investigators themselves have acknowledged that when this video evidence was presented, that it changed the way that they were looking at this case,” Earnest said.
President Barack Obama has proposed a $75 million program to help law enforcement agencies buy the cameras.
The North Charleston video was provided to the dead man’s family and lawyer by a witness later identified as Feidin Santana. It shows Slager pulling out his handgun and firing at Scott as he runs away. Scott falls after the eighth shot.
Charleston County Sheriff Al Cannon suggested that investigators would have ascertained Slager’s culpability without the video, but the images made their job easier.
“Like the family attorney said, once that video came out, things moved quickly,” Cannon said.
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