From WRAL.com (1/22/10): A Superior Court judge ruled Friday that footage from a police video camera showing the events leading up to the fatal shooting of a University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill student last summer would remain sealed.
WRAL News was among several media outlets that sought to make the evidence public.
Courtland Smith, 21, of Houston, was killed by Officer J.P. Flinchum during a confrontation along southbound Interstate 85 in Randolph County on Aug. 23. An autopsy determined he was shot four times.
In a 911 call Smith made as he sped along the highway, he told a dispatcher that he was drunk, had a 9 mm handgun and was trying to kill himself.
Flinchum and another officer located Smith’s Toyota 4Runner and pulled him over near Hopewell Church Road in northeast Randolph County at about 5 a.m. The State Bureau of Investigation determined that Smith didn’t obey the officers’ orders, first to stay in his vehicle and then to hold up his hands as he approached them.
Investigators said Flinchum fired five shots when Smith suddenly pulled his right hand from behind his back while holding something black. A black Blackberry smart phone was found next to Smith’s body, according to investigators.
No weapon was found on Smith or in his SUV, investigators said.
Video footage from the dashboard camera of Flinchum’s patrol car has been sealed by court order since the incident. Judge Brad Long reviewed the video and decided to keep it under seal.
Randolph County District Attorney Garland Yates declined to pursue charges against Flinchum in the case, saying the officer fired in self-defense.
Smith was the president of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity at UNC. The fraternity is building a Habitat for Humanity house in his honor Saturday.