How slain state Sen. Clementa C. Pinckney 'made a difference' in South Carolina
The nine people killed in the Charleston shooting last week were more than victims; they were a high school coach, a Delta Sigma Theta, a retired reverend, a recent college grad, a choir member with a golden voice, an art lover, a minister, and a woman who dedicated her life to helping others.
One of those nine people was Clementa C. Pinckney, a Democratic state senator representing South Carolina’s 45th district who also served as one of the ministers at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church (the site of the massacre that 21-year-old white supremacist Dylann Roof has since confessed to perpetrating). He is survived by his wife and two daughters.
A state senator since 2000 (and a state representative for four years before that), Sen. Pinckney was passionately committed to the causes he believed in. Maybe you’ve read about his push for body-mounted police cameras in the wake of Walter Scott’s killing in April. But the husband and father of two was equally devoted to more mundane issues that, while less attention-grabbing, were also important to the communities he represented.