11/29/2016
There is only one black on the 12-man jury trying the Michael Slager-Walter Scott murder case, and yet black judge Clifton Newman appointed him jury foreman. And while Michael Slagerâs defense team (right, with Slager) built their defense around showing, through expert witnesses, that:
Legal roadblocks meet defense for ex-North Charleston officer on trial in Walter Scott shootingBy Andrew Knapp and Brenda Rindge,
Updated Nov 25, 2016
Post & Courier
Frustration among lawyers representing former North Charleston patrolman Michael Slager was apparent Tuesday as a judge barred testimony considered key to the defense in his murder trial.
A doctor was not allowed to explain how Walter Scottâs cocaine use might have thrust him into a âfight or flightâ situation, a possible alternative reason for why Scott ran from a traffic stop and resisted arrest. Prosecutors have said Scott was simply scared of going to jail.
Defense attorneys also could not ask the officerâs former supervisor what Slager said that day about a struggle with Scott and his ensuing decision to open fire.
Lead attorney Andy Savage argued that other officers had already testified for the prosecution about Slagerâs accounts. At one point, he turned to prosecutors, exasperated over their reasons for blocking the supervisorâs testimony.
âIs it too much trouble to ask what the problem is?â he asked while jurors were not in the courtroom. âI donât have ESP.â
Three of five defense witnesses who took the stand Tuesday were not permitted to give certain testimony. Only one expert, who talked about the yellow paint on Scottâs cellphone and Slagerâs Taser, went unchallenged altogether.
Twelve defense witnesses in all, including Police Chief Eddie Driggers, have testified over four days, but objections and the resulting orders from Circuit Judge Clifton Newman have scuttled elements that the defense saw as crucial. Slagerâs family members often watched and nodded their heads at the rulings. The trend is expected to continue as prosecutors plan challenges of future witnesses.
When Newman excluded Slagerâs statements to a supervisor, Savage twice asked the judge to reconsider. Newman rejected the lawyers' arguments and, a few times, refused to listen altogether.
âItâs just not admissible according to the law ⌠and my view,â Newman said. âThe rules as well.â
Much of the disputed testimony has centered on Scottâs character and others' opinions of Slagerâs handling of the episode that led to Scottâs death. Earlier this week, prosecutors successfully objected to a witness who planned to testify that Scott had been fired from a job over a positive cocaine test. The defense also wanted to delve into Scottâs failure to pay child support while earning a $50,000 salary at the job.
âAll (the defense) wants to do is smear Mr. Scottâs character,â Chief Deputy Solicitor Bruce Durant said at one point.
Slagerâs attorneys have said that Scottâs actions and the policemanâs own predicament on April 4, 2015, forced him to open fire in self-defense even as Scott ran away. But they have struggled to reconcile that case with court rules that limit certain evidence and the judgeâs interpretation of the standards.
The stakes are high. If heâs convicted of murder, Slager faces between 30 years and life in prison. The prosecution, meanwhile, has pushed back against the defenseâs approach in a case that comes amid nationwide criticism of police uses of force against black people.
Officer âin shockâ?
Slager pulled over Scottâs car for a broken brake light.
The stop seemed normal. And Sgt. Ronald Webb, Slagerâs supervisor who wasnât on duty that day, said he had never heard any complaints of racial profiling against the officer. Race has been rarely mentioned during the trial.
âHe was a very good officer,â Webb told the jurors.
But Scott soon ran, and the policeman chased him. Slager said Scott grabbed his Taser in the struggle that followed and turned it against him.
Dr. Thomas Owens, a medical examiner from Charlotte hired by the defense, said minor wounds on Scottâs hands, arms and head indicated he had been in a struggle. But prosecutors objected to Owens discussing âexcited deliriumâ in which users of drugs like cocaine can be thrust into aggressive behavior.
The defense had envisioned the testimony, coupled with toxicology results showing cocaine in Scottâs body, as âactual evidenceâ of a possible reason for his resistance, attorney Donald McCune said. The prosecution had already speculated that Scott ran because of a child support arrest warrant, McCune argued, but the judge wouldnât allow the defense theory, dubbing it speculation.
Still, jurors learned that cocaine users tend to have a higher threshold for pain and can experience âeuphoric excitement."
When Slager and Scott got back to their feet during the encounter, Scott started running again, a video filmed by an eyewitness showed. The Taser bounced along the ground. Slager fired eight times; five bullets hit Scott.
To further show what happened before the shooting, along with Slagerâs rationale for resorting to lethal force, his defense team enlisted testimony from experts and the officers who once worked with him.
Webb said he went to the scene, where Slager demonstrated how Scott was alleged to have grabbed the officerâs Taser. But prosecutors argued that such testimony would be âself-servingâ for a defendant like Slager, who has not testified himself. The judge agreed, adding that prosecution testimony from other officers had been corroborated by multiple policemen. Webb had talked to Slager one on one.
Instead, the questioning shifted to after the shooting. Webb was asked to describe the lawmanâs demeanor, to say whether Slager was in shock.
âItâs like talking to someone who is acting like theyâre ⌠acknowledging you, but theyâre not paying attention,â Webb said. âMore like theyâre in deep thought.â
âThe lights were on; nobody was home?â Savage asked, evoking laughter in the courtroom.
âThere you go,â the witness said.
âDepartment ⌠not on trialâ
The defense team has stressed that Scottâs death arose from Slagerâs job and that North Charleston Police Department polices had played into the officerâs dilemma that day.
Slager had been encouraged to make daily stops, he had little immediate backup to help him, and he went through limited training that exposed him to stressful situations when deciding whether to use force.
The officer suffered from those practices, the defense has said.
Video: Trace evidence expert says paint collected from Taser and phone from road at shooting site
To make one point, Savage handed the police chief a sheet that broke down how much money North Charleston brought in through the tickets that Slager issued over his career. The attorney offered it as an indication that officers' statistics were being watched.
âI have never seen this before,â Driggers said of the document.
Slager also had been left âalone by himself in a high-crime neighborhood,â Savage said. Four of the seven officers on the team were absent that day. With his partner busy on another call, Slager was patrolling the troublesome Charleston Farms community.
The police adopted minimum staffing standards for patrol units months ago, but Driggers said Scottâs shooting didnât prompt the change.
But, the police chief said, âThereâs always lessons learned."
The judge had allowed Driggersâ testimony about policies despite the prosecutionâs stance that they were irrelevant to the case.
âThe defense has a right to put on a defense according to the defenseâs theory,â Newman said. He also issued caution, saying, âThe department is not on trial, but Mr. Slager is.
"The jury has to determine this case."
But one point that the defense sees as important was conveyed Tuesday: that Slager had followed the rules before the shooting.
To Driggers, Slagerâs 14 uses of a Taser over his career "seemed high," the chief said. But his use of it against Scott last year was in line with policy.
Slager often leaned on the stun gun to bring down suspects, former New York City police official and Pace University criminal justice professor Darrin Porcher added in expert testimony for the defense. But Porcher said that Slagerâs past uses of a Taser seemed sound and that the officer had been right to use it against Scott, a suspect who had not complied with any commands to stop and had not been subdued with any other techniques.
But Porcher was asked only once about the shooting itself, the reason Slager wound up in jail.
âEven after the first shot," Savage said, "was there any indication of compliance?"
"No, sir," the defense witness said.
Prosecutors chose not to follow up.
Reach Andrew Knapp at 843-937-5414 or twitter.com/offlede.
Defense lays out its case in Slager murder trialA paint analyst, a doctor with insight on cocaine use and Michael Slagerâs former supervisor testify Tuesday in his murder trial.
- Updated Nov 22, 2016
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Key developments
More information
- Trace forensic expert William Schneck of Spokane, Wash., said the yellow paint found on Walter Scottâs cellphone and Michael Slagerâs Taser was likely from the yellow road where the shooting occurred. Both items were likely damaged at the same time.
- Dr. Thomas Owens, a medical examiner from Charlotte hired by the defense, testified that scrapes, bruises and cuts on Scottâs hands, arms and head were consistent with Scott having been in a struggle.
- Owens also addressed toxicology reports showing cocaine and the byproduct of cocaine and alcohol in Scottâs body. Cocaineâs presence indicates recent use, he said.
- A judge would not allow Owensâ testimony on âexcited deliriumâ in which drug users can be thrust into aggressive âfight or flightâ behavior. The defense sought to offer it as an alternative to the prosecutionâs theory about why Scott ran.
- Sgt. Ronald Webb, the supervisor of Slagerâs patrol squad, was more hesitant to answer defense questions than he had been in a pretrial hearing, often saying he âwasnât working that day.â Webb eventually went to the scene and talked with Slager, but he wasnât allowed to testify about what the officer said. Prosecutors successfully argued that it was hearsay. The judge added that there was not enough information to corroborate the trustworthiness of Webbâs testimony. Defense lawyer Andy Savage, meanwhile, said it should be allowed because similar testimony about officersâ accounts was permitted and, âThis is a search for the truth.â
- North Charleston Police Chief Eddie Driggers testified that Slager was not known to have ever violated department policies before the shooting and appeared to have followed the rules during the confrontation with Scott before the gunfire. He said Slagerâs 14 past Taser uses, though, âsounds high to me.â
- Pace University criminal justice professor Darrin Porcher, a retired police misconduct investigator in New York City, testified that Slagerâs use of a Taser before the shooting was proper. âOfficer Slager was by himself. Heâs chasing one suspect, and thereâs another person in the auto,â Porcher said of Slagerâs situation. The witness was asked only one question about the shooting that followed. He agreed that Scott had not complied with any of Slagerâs commands, even after the first shot.
WATCH: North Charleston police officers testify in Michael Slagerâs defense
Watch the live stream of the murder trial of ex-North Charleston officer Michael Slager in the shooting death of Walter Scott and follow along with our live blog here.