Defence lays out case officer stunned by own Taser
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Michael Slager’s defence called witnesses Monday to make a case that the white former South Carolina patrolman was stunned by his own Taser in a struggle before he shot a fleeing black motorist in the back.
Slager faces 30 years to life if convicted of murder in the April 2015 death of Walter Scott. The 50-year-old motorist was hit with five of the officer’s eight bullets as he tried to escape from a traffic stop.
Mark Kroll, an expert on the effects of electrical shocks, testified that melted fibers on Slager’s uniform could only have been caused by being stunned with a Taser at close range.
“There’s really no alternative source for the damage,” Koll testified. He later fired a Taser in the courtroom so the jury could hear the distinctive electronic sound the weapon makes and identify it in the cellphone video. The jury of eleven whites and one black has reviewed the video repeatedly, including several times frame by frame.


