Chicago Sun-Times

MOURNING IN MEMPHIS

Tyre Nichols’ funeral brings impassione­d calls for police reform

- BY AARON MORRISON AND ADRIAN SAINZ

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Tyre Nichols’ family and friends remembered him with songs of faith and heartfelt tributes Wednesday, blending a celebratio­n of his life with outraged calls for police reform after the brutal beating he endured at the hands of Memphis police.

Nichols’ mother, RowVaughn Wells, fought back tears as she spoke lovingly of her son.

“The only thing that’s keeping me going is that I truly believe that my son was sent here on assignment from God. And I guess now his assignment is done. He’s gone home,” she said, urging Congress to pass police reform.

The Rev. Al Sharpton and Vice President Kamala Harris both delivered impassione­d speeches calling on lawmakers to approve the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, a broad package of reforms that includes a national registry for police officers discipline­d for misconduct, a ban on no-knock warrants and other measures.

Harris said the beating of Nichols, a 29-year-old Black man, by five Black police officers was a violent act that violated the stated mission of police to ensure public safety.

“It was not in the interest of keeping the public safe, because one must ask, was not it in the interest of keeping the public safe that Tyre Nichols would be with us today? Was he not also entitled to the right to be safe? So when we talk about public safety, let us understand what it means in its truest form. Tyre Nichols should have been safe,” she said.

Nichols was beaten after police stopped him for an alleged traffic violation Jan. 7. Video shows officers holding him down and repeatedly punching, kicking and striking him with a baton as he screamed for his mother.

Sharpton said the officers who beat Nichols may have acted differentl­y if there were real accountabi­lity for their actions. He also said he believes that if Nichols had been white, “you wouldn’t have beat him like that.”

Family of other Black men and women killed by police — including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Botham Jean and Eric Garner — also attended the funeral, and Nichols’ mother called on officials to prevent more tragedies.

“We need to take some action because there should be no other child that should suffer the way my son — and all the other parents here have lost their children — we need to get that bill passed,” Wells said. “Because if we don’t, that blood — the next child that dies, that blood is going to be on their hands.”

Sharpton said he took his daughter Ashley early Wednesday to the site of the former Lorraine Motel, where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was shot on April 4, 1968. He noted that King was in Memphis to support a strike by city sanitation workers, most of whom were Black.

“The reason why ... what happened to Tyre is so personal to me, is that five Black men that wouldn’t have had a job in the police department, would not ever be thought of to be in an elite squad, in the city that Dr. King lost his life, not far away from that balcony, you beat a brother to death,” Sharpton said.

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 ?? ANDREW NELLES PHOTOS/THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP, POOL ?? ABOVE: Vice President Kamala Harris (left) holds the hand of RowVaughn Wells as she is held by her husband Rodney Wells during the funeral service for her son Tyre Nichols at Mississipp­i Boulevard Christian Church in Memphis, Tenn., on Wednesday. RIGHT: The Rev. Al Sharpton introduces the family of Tyre Nichols.
ANDREW NELLES PHOTOS/THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP, POOL ABOVE: Vice President Kamala Harris (left) holds the hand of RowVaughn Wells as she is held by her husband Rodney Wells during the funeral service for her son Tyre Nichols at Mississipp­i Boulevard Christian Church in Memphis, Tenn., on Wednesday. RIGHT: The Rev. Al Sharpton introduces the family of Tyre Nichols.
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Tyre Nichols

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