USA TODAY International Edition

Indicted officers had prior reprimands

Four of five in Nichols case faced discipline

- Lucas Finton

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Four of the five former Memphis Police officers indicted for their role in the death of Tyre Nichols were suspended or received written reprimands during their tenure with the department, and only one of the charged officers avoided internal discipline during his tenure.

In personnel files obtained through a public records request by The Commercial Appeal, part of the USA TODAY Network, four officers were either reprimande­d or suspended for failure to report when they used physical force, failure to report accusation­s of domestic violence, or failure to report damage to their squad cruisers.

The four former officers who had either a reprimand or a suspension were Demetrius Haley, Desmond Mills Jr., Justin Smith and Emmitt Martin III. Tadarrius Bean, who also was fired and indicted, did not have any reprimands or suspension­s in the records viewed by The Commercial Appeal.

Reviews of records found that the officers received little to no reprimands as they made forceful arrests with no documentat­ion and drove recklessly to scenes. In at least two cases, officers were praised, their actions described by police department colleagues as one- off events for a good employee. It is unclear whether the department required records to prove those assertions.

One summary from a hearing about a domestic violence call that went undocument­ed credited the police officer under review for being a “top producer.”

Haley was given a written reprimand in November 2021 after he failed to file a response- to- resistance form. In February 2021, a woman complained after he “grabbed a complainan­t by the arm and turned her around to be handcuffed as she resisted arrest,” the statement of charges said.

Memphis police officers are required to complete a response- to- resistance form when “any part of the officer’s body ( is used) to compel compliance,” according to department policies and procedures.

“Officer Haley advised that he understood the policy but had simply mistaken, in this case, as to the amount of force necessary to require a blue team entry,” the hearing summary read.

During the hearing, Memphis Police Lt. William Acred said that Haley was “a hard- working officer ( who) routinely makes good decisions” and that “he was sure that this was a limited event.”

A few months later, Haley was driving his cruiser, speeding in emergency mode, meaning the lights and siren were on, and lost control of the car as he made a turn. He struck the curb and a stop sign.

Haley said he was responding to another officer’s call for help as the other officer said he had a suspect at gunpoint. The internal charge was dismissed after the hearing; the hearing officer cited minimal damage to the car.

Mills was given a written reprimand for not filing a response- to- resistance form after an arrest in March 2019. In the statement of charges, Mills was accused of taking a woman police were trying to arrest to the ground to help handcuff her.

“Officer Mills stated he was familiar with completing the response to resistance document in Blue Team, but he did not realize it applied to his actions in this cause,” the hearing summary read.

Mills was reprimande­d in another hearing for rough or careless handling of equipment after his personal digital assistant was dropped and run over by another vehicle.

Martin was suspended for three days without pay for not checking the back seat of his cruiser after leaving a shift. A silver revolver was found in the back seat.

He was later suspended for a day without pay after he didn’t take a report after responding to a domestic violence call on Sept. 27, 2020. Officers are required to take a report of domestic violence calls in accordance with Memphis Police Department policy and state law.

In the hearing, Officer James Schmedes spoke on Martin’s behalf.

Schmedes “advised that Officer Martin was one of the shift’s top producers,” the hearing summary said.

Smith received a two- day suspension in July 2021 after hitting another vehicle, causing it to spin out and strike a third vehicle.

According to the statement of charges, Smith was driving an unmarked cruiser that was not in emergency mode when he struck the back end of a Ford F- 150. That vehicle then spun out and hit the driver’s side of a Chevrolet Malibu.

Smith and the driver of the first vehicle were taken to Regional One Hospital in noncritica­l condition. The statement of charges does not mention the third driver’s condition.

The driver in the F- 150 was cited for driving with a suspended license.

Blake Ballin, the attorney representi­ng Mills, declined to comment. William Massey, the attorney retained by Martin, did not respond to a request for comment at the time of publicatio­n.

The Memphis Police Department also did not respond to a request for comment at the time of publicatio­n.

It was unknown whether the other officers have obtained legal counsel.

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