Michael Slager, Cop Who Killed Walter Scott, Will Have to Wait on Bond Decision

A judge reached no decision Thursday on whether to grant bail for a white former police officer charged with killing an unarmed black man during a traffic stop in coastal South Carolina, NBC News reported.

Judge Clifton Newman said he wanted to review information presented during an afternoon hearing. He did not say when he would rule on bail for former officer Michael Slager, who is charged in the April 4 shooting death of Walter Scott in North Charleston.

During the hearing Scott's mother fought back tears as she told the court that Slager committed murder without mercy.

Solicitor Scarlett Wilson said Scott should not have run from the traffic stop that sparked the confrontation, but that didn't mean Slager "should have become a firing squad."

Defense attorney Andy Savage said Slager had no criminal record, was an exemplary officer and has a wife and three children. He said Slager is no flight risk because he wants to return to court to clear his name.

Lawyers for Slager filed 150 pages of documents ahead of the hearing, including a toxicology report showing there was cocaine in Scott's blood when he was killed. The documents also included a psychological assessment that the former North Charleston officer poses little danger of committing violence.

The assessment, by Charleston-area psychologist Dr. Leonard Mulbry Jr., concluded that Slager has no criminal history, is mentally stable and has no history of physical violence outside his work as a policeman. The report found Slager "to be at very low risk of future violence."

Judges considering bail generally weigh whether a suspect is a risk of committing other crimes or a risk of fleeing, not the person's guilt or innocence. And some defendants charged with murder in Charleston County have been released on bond. But Slager's case is unique, said Joe Savitz, a criminal defense attorney in Columbia.

"In a case like this, you have got the video tape, which regardless of what he says about what the tape really shows, shows him shooting a man repeatedly in the back," Savitz said, referring to a bystander's cellphone video that captured Slager firing eight times as the 50-year-old Scott ran away.

"It would take a very courageous judge to let him out under the circumstances. If the judge lets him out, and Charleston just goes up in flames, they're going to blame the judge. No judge wants to be responsible for additional violence."

Scott was killed April 4, about two months before the shooting deaths of nine black parishoners at a Charleston church and the arrest of a white suspect in that case. Both cases have heightened racial tensions in the coastal city.

Slager, 33, has been in solitary confinement since his arrest. He was fired after the shooting, which inflamed the national debate about how blacks are treated by law officers.

Slager faces 30 years to life without parole if convicted of murder. There were no aggravating circumstances such as robbery or kidnapping, so the death penalty doesn't apply in the case, the prosecutor has said.

In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, Scott's family called for peace, an act some have credited — along with the officer's speedy arrest — with staving off the protests and violence that have erupted in other cities where black men have died during encounters with police. But, if Slager is released, some community leaders said that could change rapidly, forecasting an uneasy situation that could mean protests.

"We cannot continue to give grace, we cannot continue to be forgiving, unless we see that the other side of the fence is willing to work along with us, to see things our way," Thomas Dixon of People United Take Back Our Community said at a news conference Wednesday in front of the jail where Slager is being held. "In the event that there is no grace, I guarantee you, the days of grace in Charleston soon will expire. What's beyond that, I'm not sure."

A handful of protesters stood outside the courthouse as Thursday's hearing got underway.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
Contact Us