Opening arguments start in Memphis police trial over death of Tyre
Nichols
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[September 12, 2024]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) -Three former Memphis police officers went on trial in federal
court on Wednesday on charges stemming from the January 2023 beating
death of Black motorist Tyre Nichols in a case that provoked outrage and
led to police reform.
Police video showed five Black officers kicked, punched, pepper-sprayed
and struck Nichols with a baton on Jan. 7, 2023, as he cried out for his
mother. Nichols, 29, an avid skateboarder, photographer and father of a
young son, died in a hospital three days later.
"We are going to ask that you watch Tyre Nichols get beaten to death,"
Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Rogers told the jury in opening
statements, previewing the evidence to come, the Memphis Commercial
Appeal reported from the courtroom.
The video shocked Americans as the case became the latest in a series of
police killings of Black men to raise questions about racism and police
brutality in the United States.
Two of the five officers originally charged with civil rights
deprivation and witness tampering have pleaded guilty and might be
called to testify against their former colleagues.
All five were also charged with second-degree murder in Tennessee state
court in a separate case that is on hold until the federal trial is
completed.
The five officers, who were fired, had been detectives with the Scorpion
police unit investigating street crimes. Besides disbanding Scorpion
since the death of Nichols, Memphis passed police reforms such as
requiring officers to use only marked vehicles for traffic stops,
strengthening citizen review boards, and requiring more police data
collection.
The officers reported Nichols had been driving dangerously. Rogers, the
prosecutor, told jurors that Nichols "sped up to beat a red light" in
the most detailed explanation to date as to what provoked the traffic
stop, the Commercial Appeal reported.
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A view of a picture of Tyre Nichols during a news conference held by
the family members of Nichols, the Black man who was beaten by
Memphis police officers during a traffic stop and died three days
later, at Mason Temple: Church of God in Christ World Headquarters,
in Memphis, Tennessee, U.S., January 31, 2023. REUTERS/Alyssa
Pointer/File Photo
Desmond Mills and Emmitt Martin III are the two defendants who
pleaded guilty. Mills agreed to a 15-year sentence and prosecutors
agreed not to seek more than 40 years for Martin. Both men are
scheduled to be formally sentenced later this year.
That leaves Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley and Justin Smith facing
trial. They could face life in prison if convicted.The video showed
police pulled Nichols from his car, pushed him to the ground and
threatened to tase, spray and beat him as they held him down.
Nichols broke free and ran away before police caught up to him again
and the beating took place.
Defense Attorney John Keith Perry, who represents Bean, told the
jury to watch Nichols' behavior after he ran away from the traffic
stop, saying a police officer must make split-second decisions based
on a subject's actions.
"You are not supposed to sit in judgment of Tyre Nichols. Sit here
and judge his actions for 10 minutes. Measure his actions. What you
are supposed to do is look at it wholeheartedly," Perry said,
according to WREG television.
Nichols' family has filed a $550 million federal lawsuit against the
city of Memphis.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; editing by Donna Bryson, Nick Zieminski,
Leslie Adler and Jonathan Oatis)
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