San Diego Union-Tribune

DOCUMENTS DETAIL FIRED EMTS’ FAILURE TO AID TYRE NICHOLS

Pair didn’t examine man, render basic aid for 19 minutes

- BY ADRIAN SAINZ Sainz writes for The Associated Press.

Two Memphis Fire Department emergency medical technician­s who were fired and had their licenses suspended for failing to give aid to Tyre Nichols for 19 minutes while he struggled with injuries from being brutally beaten by police, did not check his vital signs or perform other basic medical examinatio­ns, documents released Thursday showed.

Advanced EMT JaMichael Sandridge and EMT Robert Long went to the location where five Memphis police officers had punched, kicked and hit Nichols with a baton during an arrest after Nichols fled a traffic stop on the night of Jan. 7.

Video footage released by the city of Memphis showed the beating and the aftermath, which included the officers and other first responders chatting and milling about as Nichols was unattended — handcuffed on the ground and slumped against a squad car.

Nichols, 29, died three days later at a hospital. His death led to the firings of the five officers, who have since been charged with seconddegr­ee murder. They have pleaded not guilty. The Nichols case has intensifie­d calls for police reform in Memphis and around the country.

Documents provided to The Associated Press on Thursday were tied to the Tennessee Emergency Medical Services Division’s decision Feb. 3 to suspend the licenses of Sandridge and Long. Officials said they violated state rules of emergency aid and treatment.

In the board’s records, officials said both technician­s failed to provide any basic emergency care to Nichols for 19 minutes, even as he showed “clear signs of distress, such as the inability to remain in a seated posture and laying prone on the ground multiple times.”

Both Long and Sandridge failed to initiate a primary examinatio­n, which could help identify the presence of any life-threatenin­g injuries, the documents showed. Nichols’ vital signs were not checked, he did not receive high-flow oxygen or an intravenou­s line, and he was not placed on a heart monitor, the documents showed.

They also did not perform a secondary examinatio­n, which is used to establish any non-life-threatenin­g injuries, the documents showed.

“Respondent did not engage his partner at the event location for purposes of taking appropriat­e action in safeguardi­ng patient T.N. from incompeten­t health care practices of other emergency medical services personnel,” officials said in the documents.

Sandridge did not immediatel­y return a message that was left over the phone for him with a person who answered his listed number. There was no immediate response to a voicemail seeking comment left at a number listed for Long.

During the license suspension hearing last month, board member Sullivan Smith said it was “obvious to even a lay person” that Nichols “was in terrible distress and needed help.”

“And they failed to provide that help,” Smith said. “They were his best shot, and they failed to help.”

Sandridge and Long were both fired Jan. 30. At the time, officials said a span of 27 minutes elapsed from the time the EMTs arrived on the scene to the moment when an ambulance left the location of the arrest to take Nichols to a hospital.

The two EMTs were joined at the arrest location by a third fire department employee, Lt. Michelle Whitaker, who officials said remained in the fire engine with the driver during the response to Nichols’ beating. She has been fired, but it was not immediatel­y clear Thursday if the state board would take any action towards a suspension of her license.

 ?? CITY OF MEMPHIS VIA AP ?? Tyre Nichols leans against a car after an attack by five Memphis police officers on Jan. 7. Documents released Thursday showed EMTs did not check his vital signs.
CITY OF MEMPHIS VIA AP Tyre Nichols leans against a car after an attack by five Memphis police officers on Jan. 7. Documents released Thursday showed EMTs did not check his vital signs.

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