Miami Herald

Pastor prays for peace after brutal beating of motorist

- BY MIKE HOUSEHOLDE­R, LEAH WILLINGHAM AND ADRIAN SAINZ

The pastor at the Memphis church where Tyre Nichols ‘ family spoke from the pulpit urging peace after his brutal killing reiterated the call for calm Sunday following the release of video showing the fatal beating by police.

Cities nationwide have braced for protests after body camera footage was released Friday showing Memphis officers beating 29-year-old Nichols, who died of his injuries three days after the Jan. 7 attack. However, protests in Memphis as well as New York City, Los Angeles and Portland, Oregon, have been scattered and nonviolent.

“We’ve had calm so far, which is what we have been praying for,” Pastor Kenneth Thomas said before the service began Sunday at Mt. Olive Cathedral Church. “And, of course, we hope that continues.”

Thomas also offered a prayer for Nichols’ family, asking God to “shower them with your blessings.”

Later, more than a dozen sign-carrying protesters marched to a Memphis police station not far from the beating, pounding on the door and demanding to be let in. Getting no response, they made their way to a nearby gate, guarded by three officers.

Some protesters taunted the officers with vulgarity, and all chanted: “Quit your job!” But the protest remained peaceful.

The protesters then observed a three-minute silence, designed to match how long Nichols was beaten.

When it concluded, protester Jennifer Cain yelled: “Say his name!” And the group responded: “Tyre Nichols!”

“Now, just imagine being beat by people that’s over 1,000 pounds on you and you’re only less than 150 pounds,” Cain said. “That’s three minutes of beating, screaming and yelling for his mom.”

“When does it stop?” she asked. “When does it end? Are we going to continue to let it happen?”

The loss is “still very emotional” for the family, a lawyer representi­ng them said Sunday, but they are using all their energy to advocate for reforms both in Memphis and on the federal level.

“His mother is having problems sleeping but she continues to pray with the understand­ing, as she believes in her heart, that Tyre was sent here for an assignment, and that there will be a greater good that comes from this tragedy,” Attorney Ben Crump said on ABC’s “This Week.”

Crump welcomed disbanding the city’s so-called Scorpion unit, which Police Director Cerelyn “CJ” Davis announced Saturday, citing a “cloud of dishonor” from the newly released video.

Davis acted a day after the harrowing video was released, saying she listened to Nichols’ relatives, community leaders and uninvolved officers in making the decision. Her announceme­nt came as the nation and the city struggled to come to grips with the violence of the officers, who, like Nichols, are Black. The video renewed outrage over repeated fatal encounters with law enforcemen­t despite nationwide demands for change.

Crump told “This

Week” that Nichols’ case points to a systemic problem in how people of color are treated regardless of whether officers are white, Black or any other race.

“I believe it’s part of the institutio­nalized police culture that makes it somehow allowed that they can use this type of excessive force and brutality against people of color,” Crump said. “It is not the race of the police officer that is the determinan­t factor whether they’re going to engage in excessive use of force, but it is the race of the citizen.”

Brenda Goss Andrews, president of the National Organizati­on of Black Law Enforcemen­t Executives, told The Associated Press she was struck by the immediate aggression from officers as soon as they got out of the car. “It just went to 100. … This was never a matter of de-escalation,” she said, adding, “The young man never had a chance.”

 ?? GERALD HERBERT AP ?? Protesters march Saturday in Memphis, Tenn., over the death of motorist Tyre Nichols.
GERALD HERBERT AP Protesters march Saturday in Memphis, Tenn., over the death of motorist Tyre Nichols.

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