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Walter Scott shooting: Mistrial declared in case against former SC police officer

Click to play video: 'Court declares mistrial in Walter Scott shooting'
Court declares mistrial in Walter Scott shooting
WATCH ABOVE: Court declares mistrial in Walter Scott shooting. Sarah Rosario reports – Dec 5, 2016

CHARLESTON, S.C. – A South Carolina judge has declared a mistrial after a jury deadlocked in the murder trial of a white police officer charged in the shooting death of unarmed black motorist, Walter Scott.

Circuit Judge Clifton Newman declared a mistrial in the case after a jury said it could not reach a verdict after deliberating more than 22 hours over four days.

READ MORE: Walter Scott murder trial on hold after juror blocks guilty verdict for cop

Scott was pulled in North Charleston for having a broken taillight on his 1990 Mercedes and then fled the car, running into a vacant lot. Family members have said he may have run because he was worried about going to jail because he was $18,000 behind on child support.

The prosecution argued that the 35-year-old Slager let his sense of authority get the better of him.

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WATCH ABOVE: SC police Officer Michael Slager trial: Jury foreperson wrote “It’s just one juror that has the issues”
Click to play video: '‘It’s just one juror that has the issues’: jury foreperson in Michael Slager trial'
‘It’s just one juror that has the issues’: jury foreperson in Michael Slager trial

Former patrolman Michael Slager was charged with murder in the April 4, 2015 shooting death of 50-year-old Walter Scott. The judge had said the jury could also consider a lesser charge of voluntary manslaughter.

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Cellphone video showing taken by a bystander that showed Scott being shot in the back was shown widely in the media and on the internet and shocked the country, inflaming the national debate about how blacks are treated by law enforcement officers.

WATCH ABOVE: After the declaration of a mistrial, Charleston Police Chief Greg Mullen says his is a community that rises against violence. 

Click to play video: '‘We agree that we don’t want violence in our community’: Charletston police chief after mistrial'
‘We agree that we don’t want violence in our community’: Charletston police chief after mistrial

After the video went public, Slager was fired by the police department and charged with murder. Scott’s family called for peace in the North Charleston community. Their calls for calm are believed to have helped prevent the kind of violence that erupted elsewhere when black men were killed in encounters with law enforcement.

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It’s the second time in recent weeks a jury has deadlocked in an officer-involved shooting. A mistrial was declared Nov. 12 when a jury in Cincinnati couldn’t reach a verdict in the case of a former campus police officer who was also charged with shooting a black motorist.

READ MORE: South Carolina officer who shot Walter Scott told boss he ran away

The video in the Scott slaying renewed debate over how blacks are treated by white law officers. There have been similar debates over race and policing in places from New York to Ferguson, Missouri and from Tulsa, Oklahoma to North Carolina.

Scott was pulled in North Charleston for having a broken taillight on his 1990 Mercedes and then fled the car, running into a vacant lot. Family members have said he may have run because he was worried about going to jail because he was $18,000 behind on child support.

The prosecution argued that the 35-year-old Slager let his sense of authority get the better of him.

READ MORE: Walter Scott family to get $6.5M settlement from South Carolina city

The defence maintained that the two men wrestled on the ground, that Scott got control of Slager’s stun gun and then pointed the weapon at the 35-year-old officer before the shooting. The defence also contended there was no way the officer could tell if Scott was armed.

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Much of the testimony at the trial centred on the cellphone video, which at times was blurry and shaky. The jurors saw the video numerous times, including several times frame by frame.

Last year, the city of North Charleston reached a $6.5 million civil settlement with Scott’s family. In the wake of the shooting, the city also asked that the U.S. Justice Department conduct a review of its police department policies with an eye toward how the department can improve its relationship with residents.

Slager also faces trial next year in federal court on charges of depriving Scott of his civil rights.

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