Not satisfied with the portions of body and dashcam footage showing the police killing of Keith Lamont Scott released over the weekend, community members and civil rights groups on Monday continued to demand transparency and accountability from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department (CMPD).

Condemning local law enforcement for their “piecemeal” approach to transparency, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of North Carolina has again asked the CMPD to publicly release all footage and audio recordings of the events surrounding Scott’s shooting.

“The videos released this weekend raise a host of questions about why police shot and killed Keith Lamont Scott, and whether, in doing so, the officers involved violated state or federal law, in addition to failing to follow the department’s own rules regarding the use of deadly force, de-escalation, when to wear and activate body cameras, and more,” said Susanna Birdsong, policy counsel for the ACLU of North Carolina. 

“In the interest of full transparency,” Birdsong continued, the CMPD “must stop releasing information to the public on a piecemeal basis and disclose all remaining body and dash camera footage, as well as audio of dispatch recordings, of the moments before and after Mr. Scott was killed.”

“The public and Mr. Scott’s family deserve to see and hear all available information about whether something was in his hand and why a man who was suspected of no crime, other than the newly disclosed accusation that he possessed a minor amount of marijuana, is now dead,” she added.

Though the family has repeatedly insisted that Scott did not possess a weapon—even in her cellphone recording of the shooting, Scott’s wife Rakeyia repeatedly told police, “he doesn’t have a gun”—officials claim that he was armed and allegedly found a gun at the scene. During a Saturday press conference, officials said they recovered a gun and ankle holster bearing Scott’s fingerprints.

The ACLU further expressed concern over the officers’ inappropriate use of force against Scott, who they were informed had suffered a traumatic brain injury, as well as the shooting officer’s failure to use a body camera.

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