SUMMERVILLE, South Carolina — On Saturday morning, the hearse carrying Walter Scott‘s body pulled up in front of the WORD Ministries Christian Center, led by two white cops on motorcycles splitting a sea of black faces gathered for the funeral. As the clock struck eleven, Scott’s coffin was carried into the church, preceded by his family and greeted by hundreds of mourners and dozens of journalists.
Scott’s mother and father, an elder and deacon at the church, sat in front as the funeral began, at times standing and raising their hands as the choir sang. A few rows behind them, Sen. Tim Scott sat in the pews, while Congressman Mark Sanford stood against a back wall.
“I’m so thankful for all of the lives that he touched far and wide,” said Rodney Scott, a brother, who said he’s worked for years in mortuary services and witnessed countless families in mourning, but couldn’t feel it until death hit home.
“I’m speechless to see my brother go the way he did,” he said.
RELATED: The Killing of Walter Scott
Walter Scott's flag-draped coffin is being carried into the church. Scott served in the Coast Guard. #WalterScott pic.twitter.com/WMU9tumWHN
— Trymaine Lee (@trymainelee) April 11, 2015
Scott, 50, was fatally wounded by North Charleston police officer Michael Slager one week ago. Slager has since been charged with murder. As Scott is buried underground, Slager will be locked behind the bars of the Charleston County Jail.
The 33-year-old officer shot Scott, an apparently unarmed black man, as Scott attempted to flee a confrontation with the officer that began just minutes earlier during a routine traffic stop for a broken brake light.
Slager said that Scott snatched his Taser from him and that he feared for his life. But a witnesses’ cell phone video of the incident reveals striking contradictions in the officer’s tale. A day after the release of the video to local and national media, Slager was arrested, charged with murder and fired from the force. State and federal law enforcement officials, including the Department of Justice and the FBI are investigating the killing.
RELATED: New details emerge in Walter Scott case
While there were some tears at the funeral, where many dabbed at wet eyes, the service, in the tradition of the black church, was as much a so-called homegoing celebration as it was a time to grieve.
During a few minutes of silence for mourners to read through Scott’s obituary, a video played on a screen high above the choir. In it, images of Scott and his family melted into each other. There was one of the Scott boys, of family portraits and gatherings with his parents, siblings and children.
About 20 minutes into the service, Pastor George D. Hamilton took to the pulpit and, after thanking those who had shown so much love to the Scotts, brought down fire on Scott’s killer.
“It’s one thing to have someone in your family die. It’s another to witness them die and witness how they die,” Hamilton said. The pastor didn’t mince words in elucidating on what he believed was Slager’s motivation for the killing.
“Walter’s death was motivated by racial prejudice. You’ve got to hate somebody to shoot them in the back. This was not because he knew Walter,” Hamilton said. “It had to be because he was African American. It had to have been an act of overt racism.”
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Hamilton said there are great officers who serve with honor and distinction. Slager, he said, was not one of them.
“This particular officer was a racist and he took the life of someone who didn’t deserve it,” he said.








