The Commercial Appeal

DA to review cases fired MPD officers had hands in

- Kelly Puente and Katherine Burgess

The Shelby County District Attorney’s Office will review all cases handled by the five Memphis police officers who are accused of beating and killing Tyre Nichols, which could lead to charges being dropped in droves.

Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy did not specify how many cases were being reviewed, but said the review includes both active and closed cases and was firm on the office’s plan to review “all prior cases.”

“This is still an active and ongoing investigat­ion,” the office said in an emailed statement Thursday afternoon.

Former Memphis Police officers Demetrius Haley, Tadarrius Bean, Justin Smith, Desmond Mills and Emmitt Martin III are facing multiple criminal charges, including second-degree murder, for the beating death of Nichols, which has sparked national outrage and calls for police reform.

The officers were all part of a specialize­d unit called SCORPION that made a significan­t number of arrests since 2021.

Local defense attorneys said Shelby County prosecutor­s will face tough decisions moving forward with cases involving any of the five officers, as their criminal charges bring conflict of interest and credibilit­y concerns.

Documents provided by the District Attorney’s Office show that all five officers have been added to the county’s “Giglio list,” which is a list of law enforcemen­t officers with credibilit­y issues.

Memphis-based defense attorney Brandon Hall said he was in court on Wednesday when he saw a prosecutor drop one case involving some of the officers in question. He said he expects more to come.

District Attorney Steve Mulroy did not specify how many cases were being reviewed, but said the review includes both active and closed cases and was firm on the office’s plan to review “all prior cases.”

Hall said one of the biggest concerns is a conflict of interest if the officers are allowed to testify as witnesses in other cases where they’ve made arrests, as they could be seen as trying to testify favorably for prosecutor­s in return for better outcomes in their own criminal cases.

“There’s no way (prosecutor­s) can ethically bring in the officers as witnesses,” he said. “It would be a major conflict of interest.”

Chris Slobogin, director of the Criminal Justice Program at Vanderbilt University, said the officers’ actions in the Nichols case could compromise credibilit­y for all officers who have served on the unit since it speaks to the unit’s culture.

“It’s going to severely damage the credibilit­y of the officers in this unit,” he said. “I could see prosecutor­s washing their hands of any cases involving this unit unless it’s a serious violent crime.”

Defense attorney Josh Corman, who previously served as a Shelby County prosecutor for five years, said prosecutor­s have been reviewing cases connected the five officers and would likely be reluctant to move forward with a case unless they have compelling evidence beyond the officer’s testimony.

“I think it would be a nightmare for any prosecutor to use them as a witness,” he said.

It’s unclear how many cases would be affected, but Mayor Jim Strickland in his State of the City address last year said the roughly 40-member SCORPION unit made nearly 600 arrests just in the first three months after it formed in late 2021. The unit was quickly disbanded following Nichols’s death.

SCORPION, an acronym for Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborho­ods, consisted of four, 10-officer teams to combat violent crime in Memphis.

Specialize­d units are common for large police department­s, but many have sparked controvers­y in recent years due to aggressive tactics that violate constituti­onal rights and have led to needless deaths.

While SCORPION was tasked with fighting violent crime, officers in many incidents would stop people for minor officers, according to court documents and defense attorneys.

Officers said they stopped Nichols for reckless driving but the department later said it was not able to substantia­te those claims.

Hall said he’s had at least 50 clients who have had run-ins with SCORPION unit officers. Pulling drivers over for minor offenses is a hallmark of their operations, he said.

“They’ll stop people for improper tag illuminati­on, seatbelt violations, reckless driving, window tint is a big one,” he said. “They’ll say they smell marijuana and as soon as they say that, they don’t need a search warrant. That gets them into the car immediatel­y.”

By the time it gets to court, Hall said prosecutor­s will typically drop all or most of the charges for clients in some of his more minor drug cases involving SCORPION-RELATED arrests.

“I have to compliment the DA’S office especially the drug unit because they do a great job of smelling the (b.s.) and working it out if the officers are doing stuff that may be questionab­le in the streets,” he said.

As for pending cases, Hall said he has at least one client who will be affected if the district attorney decides to drop cases involving the five officers.

The client is a “career criminal” who had been working to turn his life around when he was stopped by SCORPION officers, who found a gun in the car, Hall said.

The man hadn’t been arrested in 10 years but is now facing at least two decades in prison for a gun charge due to his lengthy record.

But that could soon change.

“If this happens for him, it will be a major break,” Hall said.

Reach reporter Kelly Puente at kpuente@tennessean.com or reach her on Twitter at @Kellypuent­etn

Criminal justice reporter Lucas Finton contribute­d to this report.

 ?? CHRIS DAY/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy listens to a question during a press conference in Memphis on
Jan. 26.
CHRIS DAY/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy listens to a question during a press conference in Memphis on Jan. 26.

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