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Tyre Nichols, motorist who died from injuries sustained during violent arrest in Memphis

Source: Twitter / Twitter

UPDATED: 3:30 p.m. ET, Sept. 12, 2023The five fired Memphis Police Department (MPD) officers accused of murdering Tyre Nichols were formally indicted Tuesday on federal crimes in addition to the existing state charges for beating the 29-year-old unarmed Black motorist to death earlier this year.

The Justice Department announced that Tadarrius Bean, Desmond Mills, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin and Justin Smith are now each facing four federal counts of willfully depriving Nichols of his constitutional rights, violating Nichols’ right to be free from a law enforcement officer’s deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs, conspiring to cover up their use of unlawful force by omitting material information and by providing false and misleading information to their supervisor and to others and committing an obstruction offense by intentionally omitting material information, and providing false and misleading information, to two MPD officers tasked with writing MPD reports about the arrest of Nichols.

“These federal charges reflect the Justice Department’s unwavering commitment to protecting the constitutional and civil rights of every American and preserving the integrity of the criminal justice system,” Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said in a statement. “We stand ready to hold law enforcement officers accountable for their misconduct because no one is above the law in our country.”

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents Nichols’ family, welcomed the federal charges.

“The news today from the United States Justice Department that there will be criminal accountability on the federal level for Tyre’s death gives his family hope as they continue to grieve his loss and inspire change in his honor,” Crump said in a statement ahead of a planned press conference with Nichols’ family. “We applaud AG Garland and Assistant AG Clarke for their tireless efforts to create federal accountability for these officers who were selected to be part of the Memphis Police Department’s SCORPION unit and savagely ended Tyre’s life, setting a critical precedent for accountability and justice.”

Ex-officers seek separate trials

In June, two of the former cops facing murder charges tried to distance themselves from the other defendants in the harrowing brutality case. Bean and Smith had their lawyers file motions seeking separate trials, the Memphis Commercial Appeal reported.

“Bean and Smith never punched or kicked [Nichols], and after he was successfully secured Bean and Smith are seen sitting [Nichols] up and checking on his ability to breathe,” Bean’s attorney claimed in the motion for the accused murderer. “…Video evidence shows that not every officer participated in the arrest with the same conduct. Unfortunately, joint trials may end with a result that weighs all conduct the same, and a less culpable defendant may be unfairly and unduly prejudiced by the actions or evidence related to a more heavily involved co-defendant.”

The motion continued: “The indictment lists charges that allegedly took place at both points of interaction with [Nichols], and the charges are levied against all 5 officers. However, Bean and Mills were over 1 mile away when the initial interaction took place.”

The motion also added: “Such complexity can be daunting to a jury and diminishes their ability to assess each defendant individually. When a case is being tried with multiple defendants who have been charged with multiple offenses, the sheer volume of evidence, along with the arguments for and against each piece of evidence could potentially be a source of confusion.”

Smith’s lawyer made similar claims in his motion.

“The defense of Smith will be prejudiced by including Smith in the trial of the other defendants who may be found to be culpable for conduct that arose at a scene where Smith was not present,” Smith’s motion said in part. “The jury could likely determine that the conduct of other defendants was so culpable and inflammatory that Smith could be found guilty, not based on evidence against Smith, but the evidence against other defendants. Therefore, Smith, as a co-defendant, finds himself in an antagonistic posture with one, some or all of the other co-defendants.”

All five  of the defendants stand charged with second-degree murder, two counts of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated assault, two counts of official misconduct and one count of official oppression.

Tyre Nichols’ autopsy results

The official autopsy report for Tyre Nichols was shared with the family in May, revealing that he “died of brain injuries from blunt force trauma.” The report also revealed that Tyre Nichols’ blood alcohol level was .049, well below the legal limit of .08 in the state of Tennessee. The findings about Nichols’ blood alcohol level contradict first responders’ accounts that Nichols was drunk and high at the time of his death. The autopsy is set to be released to the public soon. 

Nationally renowned civil rights and personal injury attorneys Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci issued a statement following the family of Tyre Nichols being briefed on his autopsy results by Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy.

“The legal team representing the family of Tyre Nichols acknowledges the release of the medical examiner’s report, the contents of which are highly consistent with our own reporting back in January of this year. We know now what we knew then. Tyre Nichols died from blunt force trauma and the manner of death was homicide. The official autopsy report further propels our commitment to seeking justice for this senseless tragedy.”

On Tuesday, Mulroy decided not to charge Preston Hemphill, one of the former officers who was involved in the incident that ended with Tyre Nichols losing his life. Mulroy said he didn’t believe criminal charges were appropriate for Hemphill since he was not at the second scene where officers took turns beating Nichols.

“By no means do we endorse the conduct of Officer Hemphill,” Mulroy said. “Note that the Memphis Police Department did, in fact, take administrative action against Mr. Hemphill…But we do not believe that criminal charges are appropriate. Mr. Hemphill was not present for the initial traffic stop, nor was he present when the other officers removed Mr. Nichols forcibly from his car and put him on the ground…He had to make his decisions based on what he knew, or what he thought was happening, and was following the lead of other officers.”

Although Hemphill wasn’t charged, he is expected to testify in the case. 

Family of Tyre Nichols files federal lawsuit

A federal lawsuit was filed by the family of Tyre Nichols last week against the city of Memphis and its police department. According to the $550 million suit, the officers who brutally beat Nichols, causing his death, were “unqualified, untrained, and unsupervised” and the beating was the “direct and foreseeable product of the unconstitutional policies, practices, customs, and deliberate indifference of the City of Memphis and its police officials.” The suit also compared Nichols’ beating to the murder of Emmett Till, calling the officers who beat him “a modern-day lynch mob.”

“Unlike Till, this lynching was carried out by those adorned in department sweatshirts and vests and their actions were sanctioned – expressly and implicitly – by the City of Memphis,” the suit said.

Family attorney Ben Crump said the suit should serve as a message to police around the country.

“This landmark lawsuit is not only to get the justice for Tyre Nichols in the civil courts but it is also a message that is being sent to cities all across America who have these police oppression units that have been given the license by city leaders to go in and terrorize Black and brown communities,” said Crump at a news conference.

Ex-Memphis police officers decertified

The four ex-Memphis police officers charged in the death of Tyre Nichols will never work as enforcement in the state of Tennessee again.

Last month, the Peace Officer Standards & Training Commission voted to decertify former officers Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin and Justin Smith. Former officer Desmond Mills surrendered his certification, which was then approved by the panel.

The vote came after the Memphis Police Department requested the decertification of seven of the former Memphis officers involved.

According to AP, none of the fired officers attended their hearings with the commission prior to Friday’s vote.

Three officers have yet to have their decertification hearing before the commission and one has retired.

Outrage after officer involved in the death of Tyre Nichols retires

A Memphis police officer who was on the scene when Tyre Nichols was brutally beaten by police was allowed to retire before he was expected to be fired.

According to Memphis City Council Vice Chairman JB Smiley, senior officer Lt. DeWayne Smith retired just one day before a disciplinary hearing on the case. Nationally renowned civil rights attorneys Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci called Lt. Smith’s move to resign before he was held accountable cowardice and urged officials to take action.

“The Nichols family and their legal team are deeply disturbed that Memphis Police allowed and accepted the retirement of Lt. Dewayne Smith, in light of his immediately pending disciplinary hearing for his decisions and behavior related to Tyre Nichols’ death,” the lawyers wrote in a statement. “We believe Lt. Smith was the highest-ranking officer at the scene after the brutal beating, and we’ve seen that Smith observed Tyre’s dire medical condition and did not render or direct immediate medical attention.”

Crump and Romanucci also claim that Smith mishandled the scene and lied to Tyre’s parents after the brutal beating that took his life.

“Further, police reports indicate Smith failed to fully assess the scene, or examine the facts behind the officers’ narrative, which was false,” the lawyers wrote.

“Tyre’s parents believe Smith was one of the first officers who came to their house and told them about Tyre’s beating, said Tyre was involved in a DUI or on drugs, and did not tell them about the severity of the situation or allow them to see their son. In fact, Tyre’s mother asked if she could see her son in the hospital and Lt. Smith told her no. We call for Memphis police and officials to do everything in their power to hold Lt. Smith and all of those involved fully accountable and not allow Lt. Smith to cowardly sidestep the consequences of his actions. His cowardice in resigning and not facing his own disciplinary board to defend himself is not an end-around on accountability or reckoning.”

Judge blocks release of more Tyre Nichols arrest videos

There is outrage after a judge blocked the release of more than 20 hours of additional video evidence from the brutal arrest of Tyre Nichols that led to the young Black man’s death in Memphis in January.

The video footage had been scheduled to be released on Wednesday.

The release of the evidence has been delayed indefinitely, according to the court order that said in part: “The release of this information shall be subject to further orders of the court and, in the public interest, will be ordered as soon as practicable.”

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who delivered the eulogy at Nichols’ funeral, described the delay as being unacceptable.

“Delaying the release of this footage is delaying justice for Tyre Nichols and his family,” Sharpton said in a statement emailed to NewsOne. “The first round of body camera footage was disturbing on its own – and should be enough to convict all officers charged with this murder. What else are these cops worried this new footage is going to show?”

Sharpton added: “To tell the public you will release more evidence and then pull it back at the 11th hour only causes more frustration for a city still reeling from this senseless killing.”

The court order was issued on the same day that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced it plans to conduct a review of the Memphis Police Department‘s (MPD) policies as they pertain to the use of force, strategies for de-escalating and specialized units like the one involved in Nichols’ brutal arrest.

“In the wake of Tyre Nichols’s tragic death, the Justice Department has heard from police chiefs across the country who are assessing the use of specialized units and, where used, appropriate management, oversight and accountability for such units,” Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said in a statement on Wednesday.

One day earlier, the city of Memphis passed five public safety ordinances on data transparency, traffic stops and police oversight, the Memphis Commercial Appeal reported.

Ex-EMT blames the police

Former Memphis EMT Robert Long, who was fired after the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols, testified last week in front of the Tennessee Emergency Medical Services Board.

During his testimony, he told the board when arrived on the scene police were “impeding patient care, refusing to free Nichols from his handcuffs in order for him to receive aid.

Long continued to detail his account of events from the Jan. 7 incident which resulted in the death of Tyre Nichols. He testified that after arriving on the scene, he did a visual assessment of Nichols and noticed he was beaten pretty badly. When he asked Nichols what happened, Nichols responded, “I want to stand up and be uncuffed.” When Long asked the police what happened, they responded, “He ran from us.”

He then told the board that MPD refused to take the handcuff off Nichols.

“MPD is leaning over the patient in his face saying loudly that the patient is not going anywhere and that they are not going to uncuff him, impeding patient care,” said Long.

Long also told the board that because Nichols was handcuffed, it made it difficult to check his vitals.

Long, his partner JaMichael Sandridge and another EMT Lt. Michelle Whitaker, were all fired for their inaction in response to the brutal beating of Nichols.

A fourth Memphis Fire Department employee is also under investigation.

Memphis Chief Legal Officer Jennifer Sink confirmed the investigation to reporters last month but says her staff hasn’t decided on the consequences the employee may face.

According to AP, Sink also said the employee arrived on the scene a lot later than others “and provided medical care and transported Mr. Nichols to the hospital.”

The name of the employee hasn’t been released to the public, but Sink reassured reporters she was taking the “situation very seriously.”

“We are doing a very thorough investigation because we want to make sure that everybody understands what their role is and what the expectations are for them in a situation like this,” said Sink.

“Some of them are minor players and some of them are major players. But everybody had a role, and they’re expected to perform that role in accordance with policies or training and our expectations.”

Accused murderers have their day in court

The five former police officers accused of murdering Tyre Nichols are scheduled to be in a Memphis courtroom on Friday, making it their first appearances before a judge in the case, the Associated Press reported.

Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills Jr. and Justin Smith, who were all charged with second-degree murder for Nichols’ death, are expected to be in Shelby County Criminal Court with their lawyers more than three weeks after they were fired for their violent roles stemming from a traffic stop Jan. 7. Nichols died from his injuries Jan. 10.

All five men are Black and have also been charged with aggravated assault, aggravated kidnapping, official misconduct and official oppression.

Their court appearances follow two other Memphis police officers who were suspended without pay after it was revealed they tried to conceal their roles in the traffic stop.

From ABC News:

The Shelby County Sheriff’s Office announced in a press release Wednesday that Johntavious Bowers and Jeremy Watkins, who have been deputies since June 2021, were suspended without pay for five days after an administrative investigation into their conduct. The sheriff’s office said both Bowers and Watkins “appeared on the scene following the physical confrontation” on Jan. 7 between Memphis police officers and Nichols, who died from his injuries in a local hospital three days later.

A “thorough review of the circumstances” determined that the two deputies violated several regulations, the sheriff’s office said. Both Bowers and Watkins violated radio communication procedures, mobile video recording system procedures as well as patrol field job duties and responsibilities. Watkins also violated a fourth regulation: operational responsibility of daily activity log at 201 Poplar, according to the sheriff’s office.

The suspensions indicate the investigation is ongoing and possibly widening as the fallout affects other city agencies.

Firefighters union defends personnel involved in traffic stop

The head of the Memphis Fire Fighters Association recently backed the EMTs who were fired after the tragic death of Tyre Nichols at the hands of police.

According to AP, Thomas Malone, the head of the union, said the employees who arrived on the scene the night Nichols was brutally beaten weren’t given enough information as they responded to the call for medical help.

“Our members were not given adequate information upon dispatch or upon arrival of the scene,” Malone wrote in a letter to city councilmembers. “Quite frankly, there was information withheld by those already on the scene which caused our members to handle things differently than they should have.”

Malone also defended the entire fire department, assuring that its employees “serve this city and its citizens with purpose and intent each and every day.”

Three fire department employees were fired and 13 police officers have been disciplined after the death of Tyre Nichols. Five former police officers have been charged with murder.

Former officer says he used proper training during Tyre Nichols’ arrest

One of the former officers involved in the traffic stop and deadly beating of Tyre Nichols says he believed he used proper department training and tactics during Nichols’arrest.

During a Memphis Police Department hearing, which took place after Nichols’ death, ex-officer Justin Smith said he believed he handled Nichols’ arrest by the book.

“It is my contention that I personally utilized the training and defensive tactics provided to me as a Memphis police officer in attempting to handcuff (Nichols),” Smith wrote in the statement.

Smith’s written statement came as a part of a Memphis Police Department’s internal investigation and was obtained by the Memphis Commercial Appeal through a public records request.

Smith also never mentioned the use of punches, kicks or baton strikes in his description of events. He also “categorically” denied “utilizing any defensive weapons other than OC spray (pepper spray).”

But body camera footage seems to contradict Smith’s statement.

Since Nichols’ death, other community members who had encounters with Memphis Police are coming forward.

According to AP, Monterrious Harris, 22, filed a lawsuit on Tuesday, accusing the same officers who murdered Nichols, of violating his rights during a similarly violent arrest three days before Nichols’ arrest.

According to the lawsuit, Harris’ car was “swarmed by a large group of assailants wearing black ski-masks, dressed in black clothing, brandishing guns, other weapons, hurling expletives and making threats to end his life if he did not exit his car.”

Harris believed he was being robbed and tried to back up his car before hitting something.

The lawsuit also stated that once Harris got out of the vehicle he was “grabbed, punched, kicked, and assaulted” for up to two minutes.”

The suit also accuses officers of fabricating evidence to support charges against Harris, including being a convicted felon in possession of a handgun, criminal trespass and evading arrest.

Memphis City Council discusses departmental reforms

Earlier this week, the Memphis City Council discussed several public safety proposals and departmental reforms with the city’s police chief and fire chief on Feb. 7. The long-awaited discussion came nearly a month after the council released the horrific police beating and arrest video of 29-year-old Tyre Nichols.
According to CNN, the meeting was conducted by the council’s Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee. The unit assessed 11 proposals including an “ordinance to establish a procedure for an independent review of police training; an ordinance to clarify “appropriate” ways of conducting traffic stops” and “an ordinance to require police only to make traffic stops with marked cars.”The council, which is made up of 13 members, was led by chairman Martavius Jones.During the meeting, officials said that seven other officers could face discipline for Nichols’ death. The officers will receive an internal “statement of charges,” a document that will notify them of policy violations, according to City Attorney Jessica Sink. A hearing and a written decision will follow.

What happened To Tyre Nichols?

Tyre Nichols, 29, died on Jan. 10, three days after he was pulled over at a traffic stop for “reckless driving.” Authorities said the incident occurred shortly after six officers from the department walked over to the young motorist’s vehicle and demanded he step out of the car.

Bodycam footage captured Preston Hemphill, the only white officer present during the fatal arrest, grabbing Nichols out of the vehicle before he was forced to the ground and given conflicting demands. Hemphill fired a stun gun at Nichols after he managed to escape from the police.

Sadly, the five Black officers caught the young motorist just steps away from his mother’s home. As they fought to detain the father of one, officers used a baton to beat him repeatedly. They used pepper spray and kicked him several times during the violent arrest. Nichols, an aspiring photographer, succumbed to his injuries three days later.

Since the arrest, Memphis Police Chief C.J. Davis said her office has found no proof to substantiate claims of Nichols’ “reckless driving.”

On Feb. 1, an emotional funeral service was held to honor Nichols’ life and legacy at the Mississippi Boulevard Christian Church in Memphis. Social justice activist Tamika Palmer, Vice President Kamala Harris and Rev. Al Sharpton were some of the notable figures that attended the tearful service.

Before his death, Tyre Nichols had worked with his stepfather at FedEx for about nine months, his family said. Relatives described the young motorist as an avid skateboarder who loved photographing sunsets and spending time with his mother.

What happened to the officers involved?

Shortly after the brutal arrest video surfaced, the five Black officers involved; Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills and Justin Smith, were fired and charged with second-degree murder, official misconduct and official oppression.

Hemphill was also terminated from the department for making several violations, including “personal conduct, truthfulness, compliance with regulations concerning a taser and compliance with regulations concerning equipment and inventory,” according to a tweet posted by the Memphis Police Department on Feb. 3.

All the officers were part of a specialized unit called the SCORPION unit. It was swiftly disbanded after news of Nichols’ death made headlines.

Who else was held responsible for Nichols’ death?

Three emergency medical technicians and another lieutenant were fired for failing “to conduct an adequate patient assessment” of Nichols after they arrived at the scene to find Nichols battered and bruised. Authorities said officials waited over 20 minutes to render aid to the young Memphis resident before calling medical assistance.

 

Justice For Tyre Nichols: Complete Timeline Of A Police ‘Murder’ And Investigation In Memphis  was originally published on newsone.com