‘Seared in our memories’: outpouring of shock and
horror over Tyre Nichols’s video
Recording of the 29-year-old’s killing has sent
shockwaves across the US, with the officers’ conduct being condemned
This article contains descriptions of physical
violence
Sam Levine
Sat 28 Jan
2023 06.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jan/27/shock-horror-reaction-tyre-nichols-death-video
The first
thing the video captures Tyre Nichols saying to police are four simple words:
“I didn’t do anything.”
It didn’t
matter. In minutes, police yanked him from his car, threw him to the ground,
attempted to Tase him, and threatened to knock him out. They gave him
non-sensical commands, the journalist Wesley Lowery noted, yelling at him to
lie on the ground when he was already there. “I’m just trying to get home,”
Nichols said.
When
Nichols escaped and ran away, more officers chased him down, tackled him and
then proceeded to kick him in the head, punch him in the face, and hit him with
a baton. As he struggled to sit up, officers and medical personnel stood
around, declining to give him any kind of medical attention.
Even after
being warned for days that the video of Nichols was gruesome, the images
released Friday evening were horrifying. “It’s as bad as it was described,”
Charles Ramsey, the former Philadelphia commissioner, said on CNN shortly after
the videos aired live on the network.
An
audio-less birds-eye view of a police camera on a lightpole provided the
fullest, and most gruesome, angle of the incident. It showed how Nichols, 29,
was swarmed by police and helpless as he was brutally beaten by them – images
that will be forever seared into the American conscience.
The videos
show “how gruesome it is, how appalling it is”, Benjamin Crump, the civil
rights attorney who is representing Nichols’s family, said on CNN Friday. But
they also show “how unnecessary this was. That Tyre Nichols was killed in this
manner.”
“They did
not know the character of the person who they were brutalizing. They did not
know that he was such an outstanding citizen,” Rodney Wells, Nichols’s
stepfather, told ABC. “I guess they always are dealing with criminals or
whatever. But they did not know that Tyre had such a beloved following, so to
speak.”
Joe Biden
was also swift in condemning the video Friday and called for peaceful protest.
“Like so many, I was outraged and deeply pained to see the horrific video of
the beating that resulted in Tyre Nichols’s death,” he said in a statement. “It
is yet another painful reminder of the profound fear and trauma, the pain, and
the exhaustion that Black and Brown Americans experience every single day.”
“Tyre
Nichols should have made it home to his family,” vice-president Kamala Harris
said in a statement. “The footage and images released tonight will forever be
seared in our memories, and they open wounds that will never fully heal.” She
also called on Congress to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, a
police reform bill for which there was once a glimmer of bipartisan support
that has now faded.
The
decision to release the video on Friday was itself significant. In other police
brutality cases, prosecutors and police departments will often stonewall the
release of video that shows police in a bad light. Charges against officers, if
they come at all, can take a long time. In Memphis, the city released it 20
days after the incident, fired the five police officers involved, and has
already charged them with murder.
“This is
now the blueprint for all these other police forces around the country,” Crump
said on CNN. “Now, they can’t tell us it takes this long to investigate. When
those five Black officers in Memphis, Tennessee, were caught killing Tyre
Nichols, they moved swiftly.”
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