Video of Memphis officers beating Tyre Nichols as bad as Rodney King assault, Memphis police chief says

Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn "CJ" Davis said the video of Memphis police officers beating Tyre Nichols earlier this month is perhaps worse than the infamous Rodney King footage.

"I was in law enforcement during the Rodney King incident and it’s – you know, very much aligned with that same type of behavior," she told CNN's Don Lemon. "I would say it is about the same if not worse."

King was beaten by a group of Los Angeles Police Department officers in 1991 in an attack that was captured on civilian video. The attack later spawned the 1992 Los Angeles riots, which resulted in dozens of deaths, after a jury acquitted or couldn't reach a verdict for excessive force on the officers involved. 

Memphis police say they pulled over Nichols on Jan. 7 around 8:30 p.m. for "reckless driving" near Raines Road and Ross Road in Memphis. A "confrontation occurred" during the stop, at which point Nichols ran away from police on foot. Officers pursued the 29-year-old and attempted to apprehend him, police said, and they said an ambulance was called when he complained of shortness of breath. He died at the hospital on Jan. 10.

CITIES PREP FOR VIOLENCE AHEAD OF TYRE NICHOLS VIDEO RELEASE

Nichols family attorneys said Tuesday that following an independent autopsy on Nichols’ body carried out by a "highly regarded, nationally renowned forensic pathologist," preliminary findings indicated that "Tyre suffered extensive bleeding caused by a severe beating." They also said Nichols’ "observed injuries are consistent with what the family and attorneys witnessed on the video of his fatal encounter with police on Jan. 7, 2023."

The five officers involved – Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills, Jr. and Justin Smith – were fired after an internal review of their actions, and they now face second-degree murder charges, along with several other felonies.

"I was outraged," Davis said. "It was incomprehensible to me. It was unconscionable. And I felt that I needed to do something and do something quickly. I don’t think I witnessed anything of that nature in my entire career."

"It was that bad," she added.

Davis said she planned to release the entire video on YouTube so it would be accessible to the public. She has pleaded with Memphis citizens not to react violently when they see the footage of the attack, encouraging them to protest if they felt it necessary but to do so peacefully.

She described the video as showing acts that "defy humanity" and violated the sworn duty of care for police officers. She said they failed to de-escalate the situation in a proper manner and called the officers' aggression to him "unexplainable." 

TYRE NICHOLS VIDEO: POLICE CHIEF WARNS MEMPHIS NOT TO REACT VIOLENTLY AFTER BODY CAM FOOTAGE RELEASE

Asked by Lemon if Nichols cried out for his mother in the video, Davis said he did. 

"That is why this incident, not just that, but just the disregard for humanity as I mentioned before. I think that is what really just pulls at your heartstrings," she said. "And it makes you wonder why was a sense of care and concern for this individual just absent from this situation, all who went to the scene."

She said she had spoken to Nichols' family and felt their sense of pain.

"The policy for the Memphis Police Department requires officers to intervene and stop excessive force and report these incidents immediately. Did anyone on that video, will we see that, did anyone do that or will we see that on that video at all?" Lemon asked.

"You will not see that on that video," Davis said.

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She also said that paramedics who were on the scene did not render proper care, saying "they just stood by."

"They began to render care and concern but it was long after several minutes. And which was, you know, concerning for all of us that we see a number of failures where individuals did not exercise the amount of care that we are responsible for, no matter what – no matter what the cause is. We’re responsible for exercising care," she said.

Lemon noted the officers involved in the deadly incident are Black, asking her what she made of that.

"It takes off the table that issues and problems in law enforcement is about race," she said. "And it is not. It is about human dignity and integrity, accountability, and the duty to protect our community. And as this video will show you, it doesn’t matter who is wearing the uniform, that we all have that same responsibility. So it takes race off the table. But it does indicate to me that bias might be a factor also in the manner in which we engage the community."

Fox News' Greg Norman contributed to this report.

Benjamin Hall’s ‘Saved’ hits No. 1 on Amazon’s new releases on pre-orders alone

Fox News foreign correspondent Benjamin Hall’s upcoming "Saved: A War Reporter's Mission To Make It Home," hit No. 1 on Amazon’s "new releases" bestsellers list after the memoir was announced on Thursday. 

"Honoured to reach #1.. Thank you everyone," Hall tweeted alongside a screenshot of Amazon’s list showing that he topped Prince Harry’s heavily promoted "Spare." 

"Saved: A War Reporter's Mission To Make It Home" also hit No. 1 on Amazon lists for history books, journalism writing books and is currently No. 3 among all books despite not coming out until March 14. 

FOX NEWS’ BENJAMIN HALL URGES VIEWERS TO ‘NEVER GIVE UP’ IN EMOTIONAL RETURN TO LIVE TV

On Thursday morning, Hall made an emotional return to live television and urged "FOX & Friends" viewers to "never give up" following the horrific March 2022 attack that left him severely injured while covering Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. 

"I think that when you’ve gone through something like I’ve gone through, the highs, the lows, you have to have a target, you have to get something to fight for. And this is it, trying to get back, trying to speak to you, trying to be on air and trying to tell people the stories, so perhaps it can help them," Hall said.

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"I’ve got one leg, I’ve got no feet, I see through one eye, one workable hand. I was burned all over, and I feel strong, I feel more confident than I ever have," Hall continued. 

"I think that you learn a lot going through things like this, and I was surrounded by so many wonderful people – that’s why I’m here today, and I look forward to everything that comes ahead." 

Hall was wounded when the vehicle he was traveling in was struck by incoming fire in Horenka, outside Kyiv. Beloved Fox News photojournalist Pierre Zakrzewski and Ukrainian journalist Oleksandra "Sasha" Kuvshynova were killed in the attack that devastated Fox News and the journalism industry at large. 

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"Saved" offers untold details of his journey. He read an emotional excerpt to viewers on Thursday, describing how "everything went dark" as bombs went off around him. 

"If I had the slightest iota of consciousness, it was a distant sense of shock waves and the feeling that every part of my body – bones, organs, sinew, my soul – had been knocked out of me," Hall read. "I was all but dead but improbably, out of this crippling nothingness, a figure came through, and I heard a familiar voice, as real as anything I’d ever known. ‘Daddy, you’ve got to get out of the car.’" 

An emotional Hall explained that seeing a vision of his three daughters gave him the strength to keep going. 

"I opened my eyes and managed to crawl out of the car," he said. "If it weren’t for them bringing me back, there is no way I would be here today."

"Saved: A War Reporters’ Mission To Make It Home" hits retailers on March 14 and is available for preorder

By Friday morning, "Saved" was No. 2 on the list, as Prince Harry’s "Spare" regained the lead. Prince Harry's book was released on Jan. 10, but "Saved" appears to be nipping at his heels on pre-sales alone.

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