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

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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.
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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)

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There's some garbage blocking I-55.
I've heard the garbage referred to as "protesters" but I have my own opinions about those who block roads that innocent people have to travel on.


A man died horribly but blocking roads ain't going to bring him back. Let traffic through.
Police drones need the payload to drop tear gas canisters. And maybe a megaphone to tell the drivers to close their windows and vents.
 
I can't believe these guys were even considered for police officers.
I can tell you from experience, after the year long, majority-failed stress test called 2020, anyone still a cop got fed up, anyone looking to be a cop went anywhere else, and now anyone training to be a cop has barely any standards to pass.
 
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.
They won't go on the offensive unless they have backup.
 
I can't believe these guys were even considered for police officers.
I mean we have seen this kind of shit play out before, just for different reasons. Back in the 70s and 80s Miami had a major cop shortage right about the time the coke traffickers were booming. They compensated by basically hiring anyone who wasn't actively intoxicated during the interview and wanted the job. The result? Miami police were featured in corruption scandal after corruption scandal with some of them going full Scarface and setting up their own drug trafficking networks.

It's something that happens and we don't seem to have learned any lessons. IA is so incompetent and corrupt themselves it has been a TV trope for decades, and that's a big part of the issue, cops just aren't held accountable for shit, and have been militarized far more than they ever should've been. As many issues as the military has, they used to at least do the internal justice thing much better than cops ever have.
 
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.
I'm not able to find any record, maybe some Kiwi's who knows their way around records like that can provide insight. I'm fairly certain we knew about Saint Floyd's criminal record pretty quickly, so it might be a case that he didn't have one, or at the very least a minor one.

Something tells me Tyre didn't deserve to have his life cut short though, and he sure as fuck didn't deserve to be beaten to death in the streets like a rabid animal. This shit is genuinely sickening.
 
I love that no one, not even for a single second, thought that they're wouldn't be riots. That people would just let justice take it's course and not immediately turn into raving, looting morons when the chance presented itself.

Just think about that for a minute...that's the world we have made for ourselves.
 
I can't even put into words how ironic this whole situation is. A case FAR, FAR worse than George Floyd happens against a black man and it's entirely black cops. Systemic white supremacy will be blamed and nothing will change. Same as it ever was. Was it really so hard to pick your own cotton white man?
 
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I love that no one, not even for a single second, thought that they're wouldn't be riots. That people would just let justice take it's course and not immediately turn into raving, looting morons when the chance presented itself.
I’ve seen a ton of Memphis locals saying they’d bet money on no riots. r/Memphis may as well function as the tourist board for the city with the amount of constant coping and denial of how dangerous and shit the city is.
 
anyone trying ot make this about white people or trying to get a quick one on whites should be forced to be a crash test dummy for 5 years
and to all the people going "how did the cops not think anything bad will happen?" it's black on black crime, the one thing the media refuses to touch
they just forgot for the moment they were cops

also putting money on these guys getting a lighter sentence than anyone involved with fentanyl floyd
 
I love that no one, not even for a single second, thought that they're wouldn't be riots. That people would just let justice take it's course and not immediately turn into raving, looting morons when the chance presented itself.

Just think about that for a minute...that's the world we have made for ourselves.
Chauvin "killed" St Floyd through being a rubbish cop, or at most, indifference.
Result: Burn everything.
These niggers literally kicked a man to death.
Result: actually peaceful protests.

Gives me a thunk. It's almost like police brutality isn't the issue...
 
I’ve seen a ton of Memphis locals saying they’d bet money on no riots. r/Memphis may as well function as the tourist board for the city with the amount of constant coping and denial of how dangerous and shit the city is.
City subreddits in any city that even slightly leans left are total hellholes dominated by the most annoying motherfuckers in town. I'm sure r/Memphis is always going "Don't ask questions, just visit pyramid and get excited about visiting Graceland"
 
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