Richard Combs
was the police chief of Eutawville, South Carolina, and
the small town’s only cop in 2011 when he shot and killed Bernard
Bailey after an altercation outside the Town Hall. Combs had tried
to arrest Bailey for “obstruction of justice” after the man came to
argue about a ticket for a broken tail light his daughter received.
The cop followed Bailey to his truck and tried to prevent him from
getting away. He says he got his arm stuck in the truck’s steering
wheel and feared for his life if Bailey drove way when he shot him
fatally twice in the chest.
In 2013, the Department of Justice (DOJ) decided there were no
civil rights violations. State investigators followed into
Eutawville and decided Combs was the aggressor and shouldn’t have
escalated the situation. Last August he was charged with official
misconduct. State prosecutors wanted to charge him with murder but
had to wait until a judge dismissed a stand your ground claim,
which was dismissed last week. The trial for official misconduct,
which comes with up to a 10 year sentence, was supposed to start
next week. But prosecutors secured an indictment on the murder
charge. They wanted to start the murder trial next week but the
judge has postponed it to January given the new charges.
Predictably, Combs lawyer blames the new (but long anticipated)
murder charge on racial motivations. “He’s trying to make it
racial,” Combs’ lawyer said of the prosecutor in the case. “He’s
got all the national issues going on.”
Combs is white and Bailey was black. The Obama administration
was in charge when the DOJ decided there wasn’t enough evidence for
a civil rights violation, and the South Carolina state government
is Republican. As this case appears to move closer to a fair
resolution in the justice system, it’s an important reminder that
things aren’t always so, uh, black and white.
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