The halting pace of the body-worn camera effort is striking for an agency that has pledged to make itself a model of technology-driven policing and a leader in improving police-community relations.
Rakeyia Scott sought a protective order last year against Mr. Scott, whose death at the hands of the Charlotte, N.C., police has set off protests.
There were bittersweet reunions this past week among those who had protested police shootings around the nation. “We are returning a favor,” one said.
The circumstances of the killing of Keith Lamont Scott have been a source of intense debate. Here are some questions that readers have asked The New York Times.
The fatal police shooting of Keith Lamont Scott in Charlotte, N.C., brought a different tenor to the Carolina Panthers’ game.
Footage from Charlotte police cameras that captured the moments when Keith Lamont Scott was shot.
City government officials previously contended that disclosing the recordings so soon after the fatal encounter could undermine a criminal inquiry.
City officials alternated between vowing transparency and resisting demands for footage of the killing of Keith Lamont Scott.
The video does not include a view of the shooting itself. Nor does it answer the crucial question of whether Mr. Scott was brandishing a gun, as police have maintained.
After decades in which it willed itself to big-city status, Charlotte, in the last decade, has had to grapple with a host of big-city problems.
“The video does not give me absolute, definitive, visual evidence,” the police chief said as the North Carolina city was rocked by protests.
At least one person was shot on Wednesday night during protests in uptown Charlotte, N.C., about the fatal shooting of Keith L. Scott by the police.