VISUAL
INVESTIGATIONS
71 Commands in 13 Minutes: Officers Gave Tyre
Nichols Impossible Orders
A Times analysis found that officers gave dozens of
contradictory and unachievable orders to Mr. Nichols. The punishment was severe
— and eventually fatal.
By Robin
Stein, Alexander Cardia and Natalie Reneau
Jan. 29,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/29/us/tyre-nichols-video-assault-cops.html
Police
officers unleashed a barrage of commands that were confusing, conflicting and
sometimes even impossible to obey, a Times analysis of footage from Tyre
Nichols’s fatal traffic stop found. When Mr. Nichols could not comply — and
even when he managed to — the officers responded with escalating force.
The review
of the available footage found that officers shouted at least 71 commands
during the approximately 13-minute period before they reported over the radio
that Mr. Nichols was officially in custody. The orders were issued at two
locations, one near Mr. Nichols’s vehicle and the other in the area he had fled
to and where he would be severely beaten. The orders were often simultaneous
and contradictory. Officers commanded Mr. Nichols to show his hands even as
they were holding his hands. They told him to get on the ground even when he
was on the ground. And they ordered him to reposition himself even when they
had control of his body.
Experts say
the actions of the Memphis police officers were an egregious example of a
longstanding problem in policing in which officers physically punish civilians
for perceived disrespect or disobedience — sometimes called “contempt of cop.”
The practice was notoriously prevalent decades ago.
“It was far
more rampant in the ’80s, when I started doing police work, than it was in the
’90s or 2000s,” said Geoffrey Alpert, a professor of criminology and criminal
justice at the University of South Carolina. “Even before body cams, cops were
getting more professional and wouldn’t make it personal, like it seemed to be
in this case. This is just — it’s so far out of the norm.”
To mitigate
the potential for escalation and confusion during police encounters, today’s
police training typically calls for a single officer at the scene to issue
clear and specific commands. It also requires police officers to respond
professionally and proportionately to any perceived act of defiance.
But The
Times’s review shows that the officers did the exact opposite, over and over.
The
available footage does not show any sign that the officers present intervened
to stop the aggressive use of force. If anything, it shows the contrary.
At one
point, footage captured an officer saying “I hope they stomp his ass” after Mr.
Nichols’s attempt to flee the scene.
When asked
for comment on the officers’ conduct at the traffic stop, a spokesperson from
the Memphis Police Department said: “All information that is available at this
point has been released. However, know that this investigation remains
ongoing.” The Memphis Police Association also said it could not comment because
of the ongoing investigation.
Here are
four key moments in which officers punished Mr. Nichols for not complying with
flawed commands. These videos contain scenes of graphic violence.
Confusing
Orders
The footage
begins with a police officer driving up to the intersection where Mr. Nichols’s
car had been boxed in by two unmarked police vehicles.
The officer
jumps out with his firearm drawn and joins a pair of officers rushing toward
the front seat.
One officer
pulls Mr. Nichols out of his car, and all three officers immediately start
screaming “On the ground!”
These are
the first orders in the bombardment of confusing commands that confound Mr.
Nichols and prompt a cascade of retribution.
Mr. Nichols
points out that he is sitting on the ground, as the officers instructed him to
do.
But
multiple officers shout the same command over and over with intensifying
frustration and physical threats.
How The
Times uses visuals to investigate the news. Our Visual Investigations team is
made up of more than a dozen journalists who combine digital sleuthing and
forensic analysis with traditional reporting to deconstruct news events. They
have uncovered important details about drone strikes, police shootings and the
Capitol riot.
Learn more
about how the team works.
“Get on the
ground!” one orders. “I’m gonna tase your ass.”
It
eventually becomes evident that the officers would like Mr. Nichols not only on
the ground but also lying down.
When Mr.
Nichols repositions himself, it appears to further antagonize the officers. He
tries to convey that he poses no threat.
“You guys
are really doing a lot right now,” he says. “I’m just trying to go home.”
With
officers pinning down his arms, pressing a taser against his leg and barking
intensifying verbal threats, Mr. Nichols explodes: “I am on the ground!”
Finally,
one of the officers yells more specific instructions: “On your stomach.”
Three
seconds later, one of the officers shoots pepper spray into Mr. Nichols’s face.
After
fleeing on foot, Mr. Nichols is seen lying on the ground a few hundred yards
away from his car, flanked by officers demanding that he give them his hands.
But one of them is gripping his left arm, and the other is holding his right.
It’s not clear how the officers expect Mr. Nichols to move.
Then a
third officer runs up with a can of pepper spray.
“You’re
about to get sprayed good,” he says. The others start punching Mr. Nichols’s
face.
Mr. Nichols
responds by pulling his hands back to protect himself. The punching
intensifies, and the pepper spray is fired.
Wiping the
pepper spray from his eyes, Mr. Nichols tries assuring them that he is going to
comply.
“OK,” he
says. “All right. All right.”
But just as
one of the officers gets hold of him, a new officer arrives and also demands
that Mr. Nichols give him his hands. Again, Mr. Nichols is unable to follow the
conflicting directions. He flails about, which only multiplies the police
officers’ commands and the physical punishment they inflict. He is doused with
pepper spray for a third time.
Two
officers stand above Mr. Nichols, who is lying on his side and rubbing his eyes
after being pepper-sprayed three times. An officer kicks Mr. Nichols in the
face. Mr. Nichols appears to be barely conscious or coherent, but officers
treat him as if he is resisting orders.
“Lay flat,
goddamn it,” one officer commands.
Mr. Nichols
moans and writhes on the ground. By this point, he has been tased, kicked in
the head twice and punched and pepper-sprayed repeatedly.
“Lay flat,”
another officer shouts.
Mr. Nichols
is lying limp as an officer, without any apparent difficulty, snaps a pair of
handcuffs to one of his wrists.
Officers
continue to issue commands while simultaneously constraining, controlling and
beating Mr. Nichols in ways that render it physically impossible for him to
follow those commands.
One officer
uses Mr. Nichols’s handcuffed arm to pull his body from the ground and into a
kneeling position. Then another officer strikes him with a baton three times,
yelling “Give us your hands!”
Surrounded
by four officers, he tries to move away from the baton.
“Give me
your fucking hands!” one officer shouts.
But Mr.
Nichols — with one officer pinning his arms behind his back, another gripping
his handcuffed wrist and a third punching his face — cannot comply.
Five
officers have been fired and charged with second-degree murder. Lawyers for two
of them said in a news conference last week that their clients intended to
plead not guilty.
Ishaan
Jhaveri and Christoph Koettl contributed reporting.
Natalie
Reneau is a video editor for the Visual Investigations team.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário