Good news kids: SC Jury Indicts White Officer for Killing Black Man

Locutus

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for those keeping score at home...ya just might not have heard (or will hear) about it yet. *ahem*




A white police chief who fatally shot an unarmed black man in South Carolina in 2011 was charged with murder, and his lawyer accused prosecutors of taking advantage of national outrage toward police to get the indictment.

Richard Combs, the former police chief and sole officer in the small town of Eutawville (YOO'-tah-vihl), was indicted Wednesday, the same day a grand jury in New York decided against charging an officer in a chokehold death, and less than two weeks after there was no indictment in the fatal police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri. Those cases also involved white officers and unarmed black men, and the decisions not to charge them set off protests around the country.

The indictment in South Carolina was released Thursday. It's one of three indictments for white officers in the shootings of black men this year in South Carolina, which has a dark and painful past of civil rights unrest and violence.

Combs' lawyer questioned why prosecutors waited almost four years to ask for the murder charge. Combs, 38, had previously been indicted only with misconduct in office for the shooting.

"He's trying to make it racial because his timing is perfect," Combs' attorney John O'Leary said. "He's got all the national issues going on, so they want to drag him (Combs) in and say, look what a great community we are here, because we're going to put a police officer who was doing his job in jail for 30 years. That's wrong. That's completely wrong."

Prosecutor David Pascoe said he told Combs' lawyers a year ago that he would pursue a murder charge if a judge rejected a self-defense claim, which happened last month when a judge ruled against a "stand your ground" argument.

"That is in no way a surprise to defense counsel," Pascoe said.

The shooting happened in May 2011 when Bernard Bailey came to Town Hall, which shares a building with the police department, to argue about a broken-taillight ticket his daughter had received a few days earlier.

Bailey's daughter called her father when on the day she received the ticket and Bailey and the chief got into an argument, said Bailey family attorney Carl B. Grant.

Combs took out an obstruction warrant against Bailey and when he showed up at Town Hall, the chief tried to arrest Bailey, a 6-foot-6 former prison guard.

Prosecutors said Bailey marched back to his truck, and Combs tried to get inside to turn off the ignition. The two briefly fought, and Combs shot Bailey, 54, twice in the chest.

Combs said he was tangled in Bailey's steering wheel and feared for his life if Bailey drove away.

State investigators began reviewing the shooting in March 2013 after a U.S. Justice Department investigation determined Combs did not violate Bailey's civil rights.

David S. Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice in Miami, said it was very unusual for an officer to be indicted after the feds had cleared them.

Pascoe, the prosecutor, wouldn't talk about the grand jury proceedings.

Combs' trial on the misconduct charge had been set to start next week, but after the murder indictment, a judge delayed it until at least January.

Combs' bail was set at $150,000. O'Leary said he'll likely be released Thursday.

Combs is unemployed. He was placed on leave after the shooting, and the town let him go six months later.

In August, Bailey's family reached a $400,000 wrongful death settlement with Eutawville, which is 50 miles southeast of Columbia.

His family said they don't think this case should be compared with Ferguson and New York because everyone in Eutawville knows everyone.

"That is comparing oranges and apples," said Bailey's widow, Doris Bailey.

Eutawville has about 300 residents, one-third of them black. Its main street has a hardware store, a pharmacy and medical supply store and number of empty storefronts.

Combs worked as a deputy for the Orangeburg County Sheriff's Office for six years before being fired in 2007 for "unsatisfactory performance," according to documents from the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy obtained by The Post and Courier of Charleston for a 2011 story.

Combs completed police chief's training in Eutawville just four days before the fatal shooting, the newspaper reported.

Thomas Bilton, a white Eutawville resident who was friends with Bailey, said the police chief should have let him leave Town Hall that day.

"The whole thing has been kind of crazy," he said. "It's taken a long time and I think some of the recent events across the country might have contributed to a final verdict to charge him with murder."


White SC Cop Who Shot Unarmed Black Man Charged - ABC News
 

Goober

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Fed stats- 11 no indictments, 161,000 plus indicted. Add the 2 recent police officers, aside from Ferguson not indicted.
Yep, a whole 11 not indicted.
Funny how numbers can tell a story.
 

Sal

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for those keeping score at home...ya just might not have heard (or will hear) about it yet. *ahem*




A white police chief who fatally shot an unarmed black man in South Carolina in 2011 was charged with murder, and his lawyer accused prosecutors of taking advantage of national outrage toward police to get the indictment.

Richard Combs, the former police chief and sole officer in the small town of Eutawville (YOO'-tah-vihl), was indicted Wednesday, the same day a grand jury in New York decided against charging an officer in a chokehold death, and less than two weeks after there was no indictment in the fatal police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri. Those cases also involved white officers and unarmed black men, and the decisions not to charge them set off protests around the country.

The indictment in South Carolina was released Thursday. It's one of three indictments for white officers in the shootings of black men this year in South Carolina, which has a dark and painful past of civil rights unrest and violence.

Combs' lawyer questioned why prosecutors waited almost four years to ask for the murder charge. Combs, 38, had previously been indicted only with misconduct in office for the shooting.

"He's trying to make it racial because his timing is perfect," Combs' attorney John O'Leary said. "He's got all the national issues going on, so they want to drag him (Combs) in and say, look what a great community we are here, because we're going to put a police officer who was doing his job in jail for 30 years. That's wrong. That's completely wrong."

Prosecutor David Pascoe said he told Combs' lawyers a year ago that he would pursue a murder charge if a judge rejected a self-defense claim, which happened last month when a judge ruled against a "stand your ground" argument.

"That is in no way a surprise to defense counsel," Pascoe said.

The shooting happened in May 2011 when Bernard Bailey came to Town Hall, which shares a building with the police department, to argue about a broken-taillight ticket his daughter had received a few days earlier.

Bailey's daughter called her father when on the day she received the ticket and Bailey and the chief got into an argument, said Bailey family attorney Carl B. Grant.

Combs took out an obstruction warrant against Bailey and when he showed up at Town Hall, the chief tried to arrest Bailey, a 6-foot-6 former prison guard.

Prosecutors said Bailey marched back to his truck, and Combs tried to get inside to turn off the ignition. The two briefly fought, and Combs shot Bailey, 54, twice in the chest.

Combs said he was tangled in Bailey's steering wheel and feared for his life if Bailey drove away.

State investigators began reviewing the shooting in March 2013 after a U.S. Justice Department investigation determined Combs did not violate Bailey's civil rights.

David S. Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice in Miami, said it was very unusual for an officer to be indicted after the feds had cleared them.

Pascoe, the prosecutor, wouldn't talk about the grand jury proceedings.

Combs' trial on the misconduct charge had been set to start next week, but after the murder indictment, a judge delayed it until at least January.

Combs' bail was set at $150,000. O'Leary said he'll likely be released Thursday.

Combs is unemployed. He was placed on leave after the shooting, and the town let him go six months later.

In August, Bailey's family reached a $400,000 wrongful death settlement with Eutawville, which is 50 miles southeast of Columbia.

His family said they don't think this case should be compared with Ferguson and New York because everyone in Eutawville knows everyone.

"That is comparing oranges and apples," said Bailey's widow, Doris Bailey.

Eutawville has about 300 residents, one-third of them black. Its main street has a hardware store, a pharmacy and medical supply store and number of empty storefronts.

Combs worked as a deputy for the Orangeburg County Sheriff's Office for six years before being fired in 2007 for "unsatisfactory performance," according to documents from the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy obtained by The Post and Courier of Charleston for a 2011 story.

Combs completed police chief's training in Eutawville just four days before the fatal shooting, the newspaper reported.

Thomas Bilton, a white Eutawville resident who was friends with Bailey, said the police chief should have let him leave Town Hall that day.

"The whole thing has been kind of crazy," he said. "It's taken a long time and I think some of the recent events across the country might have contributed to a final verdict to charge him with murder."


White SC Cop Who Shot Unarmed Black Man Charged - ABC News
yeah good point, this is how it USED to be handled
 

captain morgan

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Fed stats- 11 no indictments, 161,000 plus indicted. Add the 2 recent police officers, aside from Ferguson not indicted.
Yep, a whole 11 not indicted.
Funny how numbers can tell a story.


How many cops were shot at and/or killed in that same time?

How many funerals for police did Obama attend or send representatives?

Funny how numbers can tell a story
 

Goober

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How many cops were shot at and/or killed in that same time?

How many funerals for police did Obama attend or send representatives?

Funny how numbers can tell a story

Ya gotta get that color on the font right.
Obama has SFA to do with it.
4 years to lay a charge.

And you know as well as I a grand Jury rarely chooses to not indict. Approx 1 time in every 15,000. Good odds for the prosecutor. Damn they are good eh. Note correct colored font.

From the link

The indictment in South Carolina was released Thursday. It's one of three indictments for white officers in the shootings of black men this year in South Carolina, which has a dark and painful past of civil rights unrest and violence.

Combs' lawyer questioned why prosecutors waited almost four years to ask for the murder charge. Combs, 38, had previously been indicted only with misconduct in office for the shooting.

"He's trying to make it racial because his timing is perfect," Combs' attorney John O'Leary said. "He's got all the national issues going on, so they want to drag him (Combs) in and say, look what a great community we are here, because we're going to put a police officer who was doing his job in jail for 30 years. That's wrong. That's completely wrong."

Prosecutor David Pascoe said he told Combs' lawyers a year ago that he would pursue a murder charge if a judge rejected a self-defense claim, which happened last month when a judge ruled against a "stand your ground" argument.
 

captain morgan

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Ya gotta get that color on the font right.
Obama has SFA to do with it.
4 years to lay a charge.

And you know as well as I a grand Jury rarely chooses to not indict. Approx 1 time in every 15,000. Good odds for the prosecutor. Damn they are good eh. Note correct colored font.

From the link

The indictment in South Carolina was released Thursday. It's one of three indictments for white officers in the shootings of black men this year in South Carolina, which has a dark and painful past of civil rights unrest and violence.

Combs' lawyer questioned why prosecutors waited almost four years to ask for the murder charge. Combs, 38, had previously been indicted only with misconduct in office for the shooting.

"He's trying to make it racial because his timing is perfect," Combs' attorney John O'Leary said. "He's got all the national issues going on, so they want to drag him (Combs) in and say, look what a great community we are here, because we're going to put a police officer who was doing his job in jail for 30 years. That's wrong. That's completely wrong."

Prosecutor David Pascoe said he told Combs' lawyers a year ago that he would pursue a murder charge if a judge rejected a self-defense claim, which happened last month when a judge ruled against a "stand your ground" argument.

Still curious on the Q's...

How many cops were shot at and/or killed in that same time?

How many funerals for police did Obama attend or send representatives?
 

captain morgan

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Before we get too bent out of shape on that one ... how many cop funerals were attended by George W Bush, Clinton, George Bush I, Ronald Regan, Jimmy Carter, Ford, Richard Nixon, JFK, etc. I suspect that maybe 1 or 2 on the whole lot of them.


Suppose that it's only fair to ask how many each of the aforementioned Presidents also publicly announced that if they had a son, that son would be....
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

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Suppose that it's only fair to ask how many each of the aforementioned Presidents also publicly announced that if they had a son, that son would be....

Different question. Certainly not a minefield he should have wandered in to.

I am just saying that you can't fault him for not doing something no other president has done. It's not like there aren't a zillion other things he can be legitimately faulted/questioned on.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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How many cops were shot at and/or killed in that same time?

How many funerals for police did Obama attend or send representatives?

Funny how numbers can tell a story

In our political system it would be completely inappropriate for the President to attend a police funeral.

It might, however, be appropriate for the President to attend soldiers' funerals, being their commander in chief and all. Course, Obama didn't attend none of them neither. Neither did Bush, so y'all be sure to hate Obama.

Fed stats- 11 no indictments, 161,000 plus indicted. Add the 2 recent police officers, aside from Ferguson not indicted.
Yep, a whole 11 not indicted.
Funny how numbers can tell a story.

Stupid stat. Ferguson was not a Federal grand jury. Might as well refer to South African criminal stats. I know, it's all you got. Don't make it any less stupid.
 

Sal

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Anyone think they were keeping this cop on ice for just such an occasion ?
nice they had one to fry....not so nice for him

Different question. Certainly not a minefield he should have wandered in to.

I am just saying that you can't fault him for not doing something no other president has done. It's not like there aren't a zillion other things he can be legitimately faulted/questioned on.
sure ya can...it's the right thing to do....emotional masturbation....all the right are doing it