Video emerges from scene of Charlotte police shooting of Keith Scott

As officials in Charlotte, N.C., consider when, if, and how to release video of the police shooting of Keith Lamont Scott earlier this week, lawyers for the family have released what they say is eyewitness video taken by Scott's wife.

On the cellphone footage published by NBC, The New York Times, and other news outlets, Rakeyia Scott is heard pleading with her husband to be safe — and for the police not to shoot him. The video doesn't give a complete version of the encounter on Tuesday, which is already under way when the roughly two minutes of footage begins.

We're embedding NBC's version of the video here, with the warning that it includes profanity and violence.

The video is sure to stoke further speculation over what transpired in the parking lot at an apartment complex — particularly because as Rakeyia Scott approaches the scene, the camera captures footage of the ground around her husband. That area has already been scrutinized in some photos, particularly one image that "shows what appears to be a handgun on the pavement at Scott's feet," as The Charlotte Observer reported Thursday.

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As depicted in the eyewitness video, the scene plays out under bright sunlight, from a vantage point that's a short distance from the confrontation between Keith Lamont Scott and Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers.

The footage appears to corroborate an image that police released Thursday — in both, Scott is seen lying face-down on the asphalt, wearing bright blue pants and white-soled sneakers.

Here's a brief summary of the video, focusing on what Rakeyia Scott said during the deadly encounter:

"Don't shoot him. Don't shoot him. He didn't do anything."

In the background, officers can be heard yelling, "Drop the gun."

"He doesn't have a gun. He has a TBI [a traumatic brain injury]. He's not going to do anything to you guys. He just took his medicine.

"Keith, don't let them break the windows — come on out the car.

"Keith, don't do it."

"Keith, get out the car!"

"Keith, Keith, don't you do it. Keith! Keith! Don't you do it!

A burst of gunfire is then heard, with at least three shots fired.

"Did you shoot him?!" the woman yells. "Did you shoot him??"

Repeating her question, she says, "He better not be f****** dead!"

As she approaches the area, an officer apparently tells the woman to keep her distance. She yells, "I'm not coming near you — I'm going to record, though. "

She then repeats herself, adding, "He better not be dead."

The video shows three police officers around her husband — two standing near him and another kneeling over him — in an open area close to the front of a police SUV. Another officer then moves in, and the officers seem to be rendering care.

"He better live," Rakeyia Scott then says, repeatedly.

Regarding the mention of a TBI, member station WFAE's Gwendolyn Glenn says that Keith Scott sustained "very severe injuries" from a car accident about a year ago.

Scott's death set off protests and riots in Charlotte. It also prompted heated debate over how the police and city leadership should handle releasing any police dashcam or body cam video of the incident. And a key dispute has emerged, in which Scott's family says he had a book with him when he was shot, and police say he was holding a gun.