Thursday, September 22, 2016

Charlotte Leaders Call On Police To Release Shooting Video

Police in Charlotte, North Carolina during a protest Wednesday.

Jason Miczek / Reuters

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — After two days of protests saw windows smashed and businesses looted in downtown Charlotte, some community leaders offered what they said was a simple solution: release the video of the police shooting that prompted the unrest.

Charlotte Police Chief Kerr Putney maintained Thursday that despite promising transparency, he would not release the video showing the Tuesday shooting of Keith Lamont Scott. Police have said that Officer Brentley Vinson fired on Scott after the 43-year-old ignored repeated demands to put down a gun.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police chief Police Chief Kerr Putney, right, at a news conference Thursday.

Chuck Burton / AP

Putney said during a Thursday news conference that he has seen the video of the shooting, and that it "does not give me absolute, definitive, visual evidence that would confirm that a person is pointing a gun." Still, he added, it “supports the version of the truth" given by officials.

The police chief said while he has no plans to publicly release the video, authorities will show it to the victim's family.

“We release it when we believe it is a compelling reason,” Putney said, “but I’m not going to jeopardize the investigation.”

But some members of the community say the unrest itself is a compelling reason to release the video.

"I’m for full disclosure," Toussaint Romain told BuzzFeed News. "The truth is the truth."

Romain — a public defender in Charlotte who has attended both nights of protest — compared the Scott shooting to that of Terence Crutcher, who was fatally shot by police Saturday in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Within days, police released dashcam and helicopter video of the shooting, which Romain suggested could be part of the reason Tulsa has been more peaceful.

"Releasing their video at least put trust in that police department know that they’re willing to be upfront," Romain said.

Jonathan Jones, director of the North Carolina Open Government Coalition, agreed. In an interview with BuzzFeed News, Jones said police should release the video and pointed to their refusal to do so as one reason Charlotte’s protests have become more violent than those in other cities such as Tulsa.

"I think from a crisis management and a public relations standpoint," Jones said, "the police department needs to release it as soon as possible in order to answer this question that's going to persist as long as the video is withheld about what happened."

If the video supports the police version of the incident — namely that Scott had a gun in his hand — Jones argued it could "take a lot of the air out of the protest movement." Video that disputes the police version might "briefly inflame" protests, but Jones said that waiting years for the video to reach the public could lead to even more chaos.

"My view is that the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department should release the video as soon as possible," he said. "I think this video is the best opportunity for the public to have an understanding whether the police version is accurate. Even if its bad for the police department they need to get out in front of that."

Two women embrace while looking at a police officer in uptown Charlotte Wednesday.

Jason Miczek / Reuters

Jones added that under current law, he believes the video is a public record and the department is legally obligated to release it, though that law is set to change on Oct. 1.

United Methodist Church Pastor Ray McKinnon, who attended both nights of protests, rejected Putney's explanation that releasing the video would somehow jeopardize the investigation.

"We obviously have seen examples recently in the last few days what happens when video evidence is released," he told BuzzFeed News. "This decision is not helping. I think it’s a further escalation."

McKinnon also blamed the unrest on economic problems, saying the situation "did not happen in a vacuum." While he doesn't believe the police version of the shooting is false, releasing the video, he said, could still have a calming effect.

"You’ve got to release the damn video and help bring a level of healing and closure," McKinnon said. "And it will help to tamp down some of the unrest possibly.

For Romain, the issue of the video and transparency goes deeper as well. He said there is deep-seated frustration in the community that has been percolating for years. A perceived lack of transparency taps into that frustration, giving the impression that "now it's sort of this cover up where it’s not the process working," he said.

"The process doesn’t work the same with everybody and police are getting away with murder," Romain said. "If you’re in the right just show it. If you’re in the wrong, that’s why you're covering it up."

LINK: Witnesses Say Police Shot Critically Injured Charlotte Protester With Rubber Bullets

LINK: 15 Powerful Photos From The Protests In Charlotte

LINK: Charlotte Police Say Black Man Fatally Shot Had Gun, Not A Book




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2cp8z1I

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