Pubdate: Wed, 28 Oct 2015 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2015 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/help/lettertoeditor.html Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Richard A. Oppel SOUTH CAROLINA PROSECUTOR WILL NOT CHARGE OFFICER WHO SHOT YOUNG DRIVER A local prosecutor in South Carolina said Tuesday that she would not bring charges against a police lieutenant who fatally shot a 19-year-old man during an attempted drug arrest in a Hardee's parking lot in July. The case has drawn outrage in some quarters, partly because a private autopsy on the man, Zachary Hammond, who was unarmed, indicated that he had been shot from the side and the back, and through his car's side window. That seemed to contradict the account of the officer who killed him, Lt. Mark Tiller of the Seneca Police Department, who said that he had fired two shots at point-blank range because Mr. Hammond had rapidly accelerated as he drove toward the officer, and that he would have been run over had he not pushed himself off Mr. Hammond's car. Investigators refused for months to release video of the shooting from the officer's dashboard camera. That graphic video was released on Tuesday, and it did little to mollify Mr. Hammond's family or their lawyer. In it, Lieutenant Tiller is seen moving quickly on foot toward the driver's side of Mr. Hammond's car, which has backed up and is beginning to turn so it is parallel with the curb at the back of the parking lot. Then it begins to speed away. Lieutenant Tiller fires his first shot just after using his left hand to push off Mr. Hammond's car near the driver's-side mirror; he fires the second shot as Mr. Hammond passes him. An undercover officer was on the other side of Mr. Hammond's car when the shooting occurred. "Hands up! Put 'em up!" one of the officers is heard shouting in the video. Then Lieutenant Tiller, weapon drawn, shouts: "Stop! Stop! Stop!" Chrissy T. Adams, the prosecutor who declined to bring charges, said in a letter explaining her decision to state law enforcement officials that the video, "viewed at full speed, standing alone, is troublesome." However, she said: "The evidence from this investigation corroborates and supports Lieutenant Tiller's belief that he was going to be run over. Therefore, the only conclusion that can be rendered is that deadly force was justified." Toxicology reports, Ms. Adams said, showed that Mr. Hammond had tested positive for cocaine and marijuana. Cocaine was found in the pocket of his shorts, she said, and marijuana was found in his car. Yet in her letter, Ms. Adams also criticized Lieutenant Tiller's actions, saying it had been "improper" for him to run up to Mr. Hammond's car instead of staying behind the door of his own patrol car. With the officer's improper approach and position, she suggested, "control of the situation was lost." She also noted that federal officials were reviewing the case to "determine if any federal charges, not available under state law, would be appropriate." The Justice Department opened an inquiry in August, several weeks after the shooting. A department official said on Tuesday that the investigation was continuing, but that the department had "nothing further to release" now. Lieutenant Tiller is white, as was Mr. Hammond. In an interview, a lawyer for the Hammond family, Eric Bland, said Mr. Hammond's parents were disappointed with the prosecutor's decision. Mr. Bland suggested that Lieutenant Tiller had provoked the deadly confrontation and that it had been his decision to place himself so close to Mr. Hammond's car. "The officer put himself in an unreasonable position with how he came in hot, with guns drawn," Mr. Bland said. "His life was never in danger." Mr. Bland said he believed Lieutenant Tiller had killed Mr. Hammond because he had thought to himself, "I'm so mad at this kid who fled in his car, I'm going to shoot you." Mr. Bland also said that during a meeting with Ms. Adams, she had told him that she would not be able to win a conviction in her jurisdiction, but that "she was very troubled by the video itself." The Hammond family has also filed a lawsuit in civil court against the officer and the Seneca Police Department. In a statement, the officer's lawyer, John M. Mussetto, said Lieutenant Tiller had "acted in self-defense, and the decision today supports this position." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom