Crime Five Memphis Police Department Officers fired after Tyre Nichols investigation - Trust me you want to see this development on the case that's purported to be worse than George Floyd

1674267519980.png

UPDATE: Memphis Police announced the five MPD officers involved in the arrest of Tyre Nichols have been fired. The following officers have been terminated: Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills Jr., and Justin Smith.

Memphis Police posted this statement to Twitter as well as Facebook and provided the following photos.

“The Memphis Police Department has conclude its administrative investigation into the tragic death of Mr. Tyre Nichols. After a thorough review of the circumstances surrounding this incident, we have determined that five (5) MPD officers violated multiple department policies, including excessive use of force, duty to intervene, and duty to render aid.

Earlier today, each officer charged was terminated from the Memphis Police Department. The Memphis Police Department is committed to protecting and defending the rights of every citizen in our city. The egregious nature of this incident is not a reflection of the good work that our officers perform, with integrity, every day.” – Chief Cerelyn “CJ” Davis, Memphis Police.

Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy provided the following statement:

“We understand there are many questions from the public surrounding the Tyre Nichols case. Additionally, we’re aware of the reasonable requests to release video, which we are committed to doing as swiftly as possible.

But, we must reemphasize the law places limits on such video release, and that we have to make sure we do so without compromising our ability to arrive at justice in this case.

Those who know me know I don’t take situations like this lightly and that I believe firmly in transparency. I ask for your patience as we gather all necessary information so that we don’t compromise the investigation or any possible future prosecution.”


MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The death of Tyre Nichols, a 29-year-old Memphis man, after a traffic stop turned into a confrontation with Memphis Police this month has brought national scrutiny to the department and the city.

Here’s what we know about the case right now:​

  • On Jan. 7, MPD says officers stopped Tyre Nichols for “reckless driving” near Raines and Ross Road in Hickory Hill. Police say as they approached him, a “confrontation” occurred, and he took off running. After a pursuit, officers claim another “confrontation” occurred before taking Nichols into custody.
  • Family says the second confrontation happened on Castlegate Lane, just yards from where he lived and under a SkyCop camera.
  • Police say Nichols then complained of “shortness of breath” and was taken to St. Francis Hospital in critical condition.
  • Nichols’ family says the incident made him go into cardiac arrest, left him with a broken neck and he suffered from other medical issues.
  • On Jan. 10, he died in the hospital.
1674267629853.png

Who is Tyre Nichols?

  • He is 29 years old. His family says he’s 6’4”, 145-150 lbs.
  • He leaves behind a 4-year-old son.
  • Family says he’s never been in trouble.
  • He liked to take pictures and loved to skateboard. Friends wore “Skate in Peace” shirts to his memorial.
  • He was “infectious,” family said. The type of guy that “everywhere he went, he left an impact.” They say he had a “pure soul” and loved helping people.
  • He worked at FedEx. The company released a statement and said, “We are deeply saddened by the tragic loss of our team member.”

Who is investigating?

  • Shelby County District Attorney General Steve Mulroy immediately asked the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation to conduct an independent investigation into the use of force by Memphis police officers.
  • On Jan. 9, his office sent an email stating they plan “to publish the redacted results on the SCDAG website when the findings are complete.”
  • On Jan. 15, Police Chief C.J. Davis and Mayor Jim Strickland released a joint statement stating the officers involved in the incident have been served notice of “impending administrative action.” Davis also stated she reviewed “various sources of information involving this incident.”
  • On Jan. 16, Nichols’ family retained civil rights attorney Ben Crump. He stated, “all of the available information tells us that this was the tragic and preventable death of a young man deeply beloved by his family and community.” He added, “nobody should die from a simple traffic stop,” and the footage is the “only way to discern the true narrative.”
  • On Jan. 17, the city issued a statement saying the video would be released publicly after the completion of the internal investigation into the actions of the officers and after Nichols’ family has had the opportunity to review it privately. They have not said what type of video from the incident exists, but that they are arranging to meet with Nichols’ family next week.
  • On Jan. 18, United States Attorney Kevin G. Ritz announced the U.S. Attorney’s Office in coordination with the FBI and the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice opened a civil rights investigation into the death of Tyre Nichols.

Internal review

  • The city says before it can discipline or terminate an employee, they must go through a required procedural process.
  • Internal Affairs investigates “all complaints lodged against police personnel.”
  • Memphis police said it’s working “quickly and appropriately” to go through the administrative disciplinary and investigative process. They expect the process to wrap up this week.
  • Memphis police haven’t released the names of the officers or said how many officers are involved.
  • Internal Affairs has gone back to the scene since the incident.
  • Keep in mind, employees can appeal any decision made with the Civil Service Commission.
https://wreg.com/news/investigations/tyre-nichols-and-memphis-police-confrontation-what-we-know/ (Archive)

:story:
 
I'm kinda torn on actually mostly peaceful protests. I want it to end and so I'd like to get through the "mostly peaceful" part as quickly as possible.

they shouldn't have done 2020, we all know how this works now
I'm betting the combination of almost all black officers, Biden being in office, and off-year will keep the peace.

The officers are charged. No truckloads of bricks are on the way.
 
Of course the fucking retards at CNN have to spin this. Didn't have actual white cops commit this atrocity, but we can't let a perfectly valid crime go to waste, right?

It's a small miracle all the officers involved in this are black or we'd be looking at weeks of more "fiery but mostly peaceful" protests. That said, this whole situation is fucking awful and these guys need to fry. WTF was going on to cause this whole situation in the first place?
 
I kind of wonder if dealing with other blacks doing stupid shit day in and day out every goddamn day does make them racist against other blacks. I further wonder if they'd have been as quick to beat a white dude to death who decided to play Run From the Popo. Like, a black restaurant server who gets a table of six black people probably has a similar mental reaction to being a black cop in Memphis.
 
Of course the fucking retards at CNN have to spin this. Didn't have actual white cops commit this atrocity, but we can't let a perfectly valid crime go to waste, right?

It's a small miracle all the officers involved in this are black or we'd be looking at weeks of more "fiery but mostly peaceful" protests. That said, this whole situation is fucking awful and these guys need to fry. WTF was going on to cause this whole situation in the first place?
Yeah this is why I'm not expecting a ton of fiery but peaceful protests( I know, rate me optimistic) because of the optics of a bunch of black rioters burning down cities because 5 black cops beat a black suspect to death is really bad.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MrJokerRager
There ain’t a sane person who would watch the first video of the traffic stop and not 100% believe that victims best move was to run because he feared for his life. I absolutely believe that after watching the video relating to his stop he legitimately and rightfully feared for his life. That cop was just making excuses to escalate the situation and did everything he could to ensure even when Tyre complied that it wasn’t enough. He went apeshit and never came back down. It is remarkable to watch that video a second time and just watch that cop go fill retard.

If he had made it home alive and they never got him; that video alone would have been enough (of just the stop) to take the officers for civil rights violations and brutality and seen them at the least lose their jobs and face some minor charges.

They were a mob, not a squad of police officers.
 
They were a mob, not a squad of police officers.
I'll 🧩 a bit - almost 40% of Memphis's budget goes to policing. It's essentially a gigantic make-work program that takes in anyone. Before 2020 it had a reputation of being relatively chill and full of cops who didn't give a shit because the union is so strong, the mayor is a former cop etc.

After 2020, a lot of unsavory people who couldn't find work because of the coof started joining up because of course they did. And now we're seeing some real horrorshow shit manifest.
Two of the five former Memphis police officers arrested for the killing of 29-year-old Tyre Nichols had been on the job for a couple of years, and the others no more than six years.
 
I'm sure there's somebody looking up Tyre's criminal history. Even so, that beatdown was WAY out of proportion. At least you could argue that Chauvin's kneeing was procedure. Kicking somebody when they're down (literally) is inhumane.
It's basically completely indefensible. They held him up so they could beat him more. This wasn't 'routine procedure gone wrong' this was 'gangland execution.'
 
I'll 🧩 a bit - almost 40% of Memphis's budget goes to policing. It's essentially a gigantic make-work program that takes in anyone. Before 2020 it had a reputation of being relatively chill and full of cops who didn't give a shit because the union is so strong, the mayor is a former cop etc.

After 2020, a lot of unsavory people who couldn't find work because of the coof started joining up because of course they did. And now we're seeing some real horrorshow shit manifest.
I have an ex who had always dreamed of being a cop and did all she could to join (military service in the nat. guard, MOS was even military police.) I haven't heard from her in a while and we didn't end on speaking terms but I did hear she moved shop soon after she got done with her trial time as a PST. I wonder if this is connected to that.
 
I'm sure there's somebody looking up Tyre's criminal history. Even so, that beatdown was WAY out of proportion. At least you could argue that Chauvin's kneeing was procedure. Kicking somebody when they're down (literally) is inhumane.
Chauvin was caught without a chair when the music stopped. Not sure what kind of record Nichols may have but he was a FedEx employee, I'm not sure if they're very big on hiring felons.

Kicking him in the head, holding him down and hitting him with a baton, and then standing him up and punching the shit out of him wasn't very cash money of officers friendly.
 
I'm sure there's somebody looking up Tyre's criminal history.
It doesn't matter what this nigger has done before, because the cops weren't beating the shit out of him and killing him for that. They beat him to death because they were mad he made their jobs a little bit harder. Fighting before the handcuffs are on is one thing, literally holding him up so some other guy can take swings at him is gang shit.
 
It's basically completely indefensible. They held him up so they could beat him more. This wasn't 'routine procedure gone wrong' this was 'gangland execution.'
That’s guys neck snapped back so far that it was probably the “kill shot”. I couldn’t believe they held him in place so that guy could get a full wind up on the guy. Watching his head whip that fast made my eyes twitch with unease.

I forget how many times he slumped over once he was up against the car but I recall the guy telling him “you ain’t going nowhere”.

How they could all stand around and ignore obvious signs of extreme physical trauma is startling.
 
My takeaway, particularly from the CCTV streetlight camera? There should be more than those 5 fuckstains getting charged. There were at least 6-7 cops in the mob while the brutality was still going on. They may not all have been participating, but they were all complicit for not trying to stop it.
 
Back