Tyrese Nichols

yyz

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Tyre (auto correct fucked up the title)


Mom says his "assignment from God" is over.

:facepalm:


I know absolutely nothing about this young man, or the cops who kicked the shit out of him.

My spidey senses tell me that when five BLACK cops beat a black man to death, he probably wasn't playing by the rules.

:shrug:
 
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WhatsHisNuts

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I watched clips of the video they just released. This is really bad. Not that it would justify doing it to anyone, but they must have been looking for someone else because the way they treat him makes zero sense.

He gets pulled over for a traffic violation but they don't explain which one.
They pull him from the vehicle and immediately start beating on him.
The cops are beating him for not putting up his hands while one holds his arms down.
The cops beat him for not laying down on his stomach while he's already on his stomach.

Tyre was cooperating as best someone could while getting the shit beat out of them. He wasn't swearing at the officers. He was asking why they were doing this. When they were giving him commands he was following them, but they just kept beating.
 
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yyz

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After seeing the videos, I can't find a reason for what they did. Makes me think others will come out of the woodwork with stories about this Scorpion detail.

As for FOX? Business as usual for those cocksuckers. They did the minimal due diligence in showing the videos, and saying it was horrible, but certainly managed to downplay the incident. They couldn't focus enough on the Antifa aspect that was sure to erupt around the Country, in the form of burning cities and violence. In fact, while MSM kept focusing on the beating, FOX immediately shifted to the crowds in the streets, BEGGING for altercations, so they could tell their informed viewers what animals "these people" are.
 

WhatsHisNuts

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After seeing the videos, I can't find a reason for what they did. Makes me think others will come out of the woodwork with stories about this Scorpion detail.

As for FOX? Business as usual for those cocksuckers. They did the minimal due diligence in showing the videos, and saying it was horrible, but certainly managed to downplay the incident. They couldn't focus enough on the Antifa aspect that was sure to erupt around the Country, in the form of burning cities and violence. In fact, while MSM kept focusing on the beating, FOX immediately shifted to the crowds in the streets, BEGGING for altercations, so they could tell their informed viewers what animals "these people" are.

I heard that there were two recent complaints about this Scorpion squad for excessive force.

Fox is playing to their base. Skulnik, Cricket, HH, Ray, Buddy, etc.
 

THE KOD

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By Steve Visser, Marcus K. Garner
Feb 8, 2011

Police chief, mayor plan a new approach to fighting crimeFormer Atlanta Police Chief Eldrin Bell could hardly believe that the Red Dog unit, the hard-charging drug strike force he headed in the late 1980s, would be no more.

"What?" Bell shouted when he heard the news.

But over at the natatorium in the Old Fourth Ward, the reaction was different. "People started cheering," said Matt Garbett, president of the Old Fourth Ward Neighbors. “There is obviously some ill will toward the Red Dog unit.”

Police Chief George Turner, with Mayor Kasim Reed standing directly behind him, announced Monday that he is disbanding the squad known for its fatigues and in-your-face tactics. He said it will be replaced with a unit that will use technology and sophisticated analysis to prevent and solve violent crimes.

"There's going to be a blanket rule in the city," Reed said. "You will not put your hands on people in this town. You will not do violence in this city and it stand."
ExploreAtlanta Police Red Dog squad was a product of a very different era


In December, the city agreed to pay more than $1 million to settle a lawsuit brought by patrons of the Atlanta Eagle bar, who claimed that Red Dog officers violated their civil rights in a 2009 raid on the bar.

Turner denied Monday that he was taking down the 29-member team as a response to allegations the unit used excessive force.

"This is not a result of any one incident," he said Monday. "I've discussed with my folks for the last six months about retooling the Red Dogs."

Not a small number of people say that the Red Dog was all about putting its hands on people -- for good or ill. The unit's supporters say it made the streets safer by cracking down on drug dealers and other street criminals. The squad's critics say it ran roughshod over constitutional protections.

"I think the crime is going to go back up again," said John Pavlin, who heads up public safety for the West End Neighborhood Development. "We know who the drug dealers are. They need to make it uncomfortable for them."

But Bruce Harvey, a defense lawyer, said the unit was famous for illegal searches and arrests. “They were traditionally a unit that did what it wanted to do and found a way to justify it afterward," he said.”

Red Dog -- which is said to stand for Run Every Drug Dealer Out Of Georgia -- came into being during the crack-cocaine epidemic in the 1980s when Atlanta, like other cities had open-air drug markets and almost weekly drive-by shootings.
ExploreNo Red Dog could mean fewer police complaints
Bell, who was named to head the unit in 1989, described how a patrol car with no light array on the roof, full of Red Dogs, would sneak up on criminals selling drugs.

"How much impact can a single officer in a single-person car have on drugs?" he asked. "I put a unit together with four people in each car. The element of surprise gave you the opportunity to eliminate drugs and violence in the community without the use of excessive force.

"As a result of how we policed Atlanta, what I'm hearing from people, even now, is that we struck fear in the hearts of criminals," he said.

Turner said the unit that will replace the Red Dog squad won't be less aggressive, but he insisted that new unit of 50 officers will use smarter tactics.

Reed made it clear that he wants a unit made up of high-performing officers who will make sure arrests meet constitutional muster.

"I think that you have to be tough on crime and smart on crime by making a difference on the streets of Atlanta," he said. "But you also have to do it with a sense of humanity and decency, and in a constitutional manner."

Makeda Johnson chairs the city's Neighborhood Planning Unit, which encompasses Vine City and English Avenue and includes "The Bluff," a neighborhood notorious for drug dealing ranging from heroin to crack cocaine. She said Red Dog was more successful at driving the drug trade underground than stamping it out.

"I don’t know if having Red Dog has been very productive," she said. "If we still have people walking up to sell drugs and we still have people coming from outside our community to purchase drugs, then clearly the police strategy has not worked. That is not rocket science'"

Frank Rotondo, executive director of the Georgia Association of Police Chiefs, applauded Turner's move, suggesting that it might be time for current Red Dog officers to transition to less rigorous policing duties for a while.

"Officers in those specialized units have to rotate," said Rotondo, a 20-year veteran of the force in Suffolk County, N.Y. "I think that was why the Red Dog unit had some bad press. This is a positive move."

There were mixed opinions from city council members Monday.

Ivory Lee Young, the chairman of the city’s Public Safety Committee, said he trusts Turner’s judgment in disbanding the unit.

“When the unit started, you had crack-cocaine running up and down the streets,” Young said. “This is a new day, and I support the decision the chief has made in how we use our resources.”

But City Council President Ceasar Mitchell called the decision “disappointing.”

"I am concerned about the signal disbanding the Red Dog Unit will send," Mitchell said. "If stronger supervision and better training is needed for the Red Dog Unit, let’s take that approach."

Bell said he welcomes the new direction.

"Any unit you develop, criminals get accustomed to," he said. "So you have to change."
............................................

we had the same situation in Atlanta . These guys have to be the meanest take no shit dudes in a squad like this. It does not always equate to the way they might treat innocent citizens.

the full story has not been told. What was Tyre interactions before this all started. what was he guilty of doing to them for that kind of a response. Looked like one police really hurt his leg or knee. How did that happen

the family is in the position for a major lawsuit against the city
 
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ChrryBlstr

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For those who wonder "why didn't they just comply?"


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

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.

https://archive.is/rvffl#selection-543.0-605.123

Peace! :)
 

yyz

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Sadly, these are the exact "officers" I predicted the Country was bound to have. Several years ago, there was debate here over police being handcuffed from doing their job. I mentioned that good, hardworking cops would end up quitting, and this is what you would end up with. It's been happening for a while now, and these are the people you get.
 

eeeerock

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YYZ Wait for a few years and you and your buddies that got the jab can talk about how good of an idea it was to take it!!! See if you are right again
 

ChrryBlstr

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YYZ: An argument can also be made that many have been this way since the very beginning. The only difference is the amount of cameras on the streets. In particular, citizens who have been able to capture these moments with their cell phones. Many whistleblowers (ex-cops) that I have interviewed have said that everyone having a camera now has been a game changer and the chance of being recorded is a real fear for many officers.

With that being said, the number of Nazis and white supremacists joining the ranks has been a purposeful strategy that has been carried out in the past few decades.

Peace! :)
 

yyz

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YYZ Wait for a few years and you and your buddies that got the jab can talk about how good of an idea it was to take it!!! See if you are right again

I'll wait a few years, and see if billions of people who got "the jab" end up dying from it. In the meantime, I'll keep asking, "why this vaccine" for so many to suddenly become "educated" in what's not good to put in your body?

How many of you guys eat shit that no human should eat? Smoke? Drink? Do drugs? Take prescriptions? Etc. None of it concerns you, but this vaccine does? Yup. Its amazing how so many of you free thinkers all got smart at the same time, over the same thing.
 
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