Officers say Slager's shooting story contradicted video

Michael Slager

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Two police officers testified Monday that the account Michael Slager gave them about shooting Walter Scott in the minutes after the slaying contradicted a dramatic cellphone video of the unarmed black motorist's death.

The trial of Slager, the white former North Charleston police officer who is charged with murder in the 50-year-old man's death, entered its second week as the prosecution continued calling witnesses before a jury of 11 whites and one black.

North Charleston police Sgt. James Gann and Lt. Daniel Bowman both raced to the scene in their cruisers after Slager radioed he was pursuing Scott on foot after an April 4, 2015, traffic stop. The pursuit began when Scott ran after being pulled over for a broken taillight.

Gann testified that when he arrived, Scott had bullet wounds and was face down on the ground. He said he performed CPR on Scott until emergency medical personnel arrived. He said Scott was unresponsive throughout.

Both officers testified that when they got to the scene, Slager told them he and Scott had wrestled and that Scott got control of Slager's Taser.

Gann testified that Slager told him Scott "stood up, pointed the Taser at him, and that's when he deployed his department-issued firearm." He added "my understanding was Mr. Scott had the Taser and they were fairly close together - 3 or 4 feet."

Bowman also testified that Slager told him Scott was facing him with the Taser.

"I thought it was from close range," Bowman said

The account is contradicted by a cellphone video taken by a bystander that a jury saw last week.

The video, which stunned the nation, shows Slager shooting eight times at Scott's back from yards away as the motorist fled from the traffic stop.

On cross-examination, Bowman testified that Slager appeared disheveled and had dust and dirt on his uniform after the shooting.

"There's no question" he had been in a fight, Bowman said, adding Slager also had lacerations on his arms and knees.

Later Monday, Bryan Chiles, who works for Taser International, discussed how stun guns similar to the one used by Slager operate. The defense contends Slager and Walter Scott struggled over the former North Charleston officer's Taser before Slager shot Scott.

Chiles testified that testing after the shooting showed the Taser was fired six times during the fight. But he says that just determines how many times the trigger was pulled - not how effective the gun may have been in subduing or injuring Scott.

Slager, 34, faces 30 years to life in prison if convicted in Scott's death.