South Carolina Officer Is Charged With Murder In Black Man’s Death By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT And MATT APUZZOAPRIL 7, 2015

Michael T. Slager, 33
Michael T. Slager, 33

WASHINGTON — A white police offi­cer in North Charleston, S.C., was charged with mur­der on Tuesday after a video sur­faced show­ing him shoot­ing and killing an appar­ent­ly unarmed black man in the back while he ran away.

The offi­cer, Michael T. Slager, 33, had said he feared for his life because the man took his stun gun in a scuf­fle after a traf­fic stop on Saturday. A video, how­ev­er, shows the offi­cer fir­ing eight times as the man — Walter L. Scott, 50 — fled.

The North Charleston may­or announced the state charges at a news con­fer­ence Tuesday evening.

The shoot­ing comes on the heels of high-pro­file inci­dents of police offi­cers using lethal force in New York, Cleveland, Ferguson, Mo., and else­where around the coun­try. The deaths have sparked a nation­al debate over whether police are too quick to use force, par­tic­u­lar­ly in cas­es involv­ing black men.

A White House task force has rec­om­mend­ed a host of changes to the nation’s police poli­cies, and President Obama dis­patched Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., to cities around the coun­try to try to improve police rela­tions with minor­i­ty neighborhoods.

North Charleston is the state’s third-largest city with a pop­u­la­tion of about 100,000. African-Americans make up about 47 per­cent of res­i­dents, and whites account for about 37 per­cent. The city police depart­ment is about 80 per­cent white, accord­ing to data col­lect­ed by the Justice Department in 2007, the most recent peri­od available.

When you’re wrong, you’re wrong,” Mayor Keith Summey said of the shoot­ing dur­ing the news con­fer­ence. “And if you make a bad deci­sion, don’t care if you’re behind the shield or just a cit­i­zen on the street, you have to live by that decision.”

The shoot­ing unfold­ed after Officer Slager stopped the dri­ver of a Mercedes-Benz with a bro­ken tail­light, accord­ing to police reports. Mr. Scott ran away, and Officer Slager chased him into a grassy lot that abuts a muf­fler shop. He fired his Taser, an elec­tron­ic stun gun, but it did not stop Mr. Scott, accord­ing to police reports.

Moments after the strug­gle, Officer Slager report­ed on his radio, “Shots fired and the sub­ject is down. He took my Taser,” accord­ing to police reports.

But the video, which was tak­en by a bystander and pro­vid­ed to The New York Times by Mr. Scott’s lawyer, presents a dif­fer­ent account. The video begins in the vacant lot, appar­ent­ly moments after Officer Slager fired his Taser. Wires, which car­ry the elec­tri­cal cur­rent from the stun gun, appear to be extend­ing from Mr. Scott’s body as the two men tus­sle and Mr. Scott turns to run.

Something — it is not clear whether it is the stun gun — is either tossed or knocked to the ground behind the two men and Officer Slager draws his gun, the video shows. When the offi­cer fires, Mr. Scott appears to be 15 to 20 feet away and flee­ing. He falls after the last of eight shots.

The offi­cer then runs back toward where the ini­tial scuf­fle occurred and picks some­thing off the ground. Moments lat­er, he drops an object near Mr. Scott’s body, the video shows.

The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, the state’s crim­i­nal inves­tiga­tive body, has begun an inquiry into the shoot­ing. The F.B.I. and the Justice Department, which has opened a string of civ­il rights inves­ti­ga­tions into police depart­ments under Mr. Holder, is also investigating.

The Supreme Court has held that an offi­cer may use dead­ly force against a flee­ing sus­pect only when there is prob­a­ble cause that he “pos­es a sig­nif­i­cant threat of death or seri­ous phys­i­cal injury to the offi­cer or others.”

Officer Slager served in the Coast Guard before join­ing the force five years ago, his lawyer said. The police chief of North Charleston did not return repeat­ed calls. Because police depart­ments are not required to release data on how often offi­cers use force, it was not imme­di­ate­ly clear how often police shoot­ings occur in North Charleston, a work­ing-class com­mu­ni­ty adja­cent to the tourist des­ti­na­tion of Charleston.