3 US police officers convicted in connection with beating death of black man in Jan 2023
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The death of Mr Tyre Nichols in Memphis, Tennessee, caused outrage in the US and prompted calls for police reform.
PHOTO: AFP
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WASHINGTON – A former police officer on trial over the brutal beating death of a black motorist was found guilty of civil rights offences on Oct 3 in US federal court, while two others were convicted on charges of witness tampering.
All three were cleared of the most serious charge they faced, which would have held them responsible for the death of 29-year-old Tyre Nichols. But they still face long prison sentences, up to 20 years, after the felony convictions.
A total of five black police officers
Two of them pleaded guilty
The jury spent three weeks repeatedly watching the video, including graphic clips in which the officers punch and kick Mr Nichols and hit him with a police baton near his home as he called out for his mother.
The case caused outrage in America and prompted calls for police reform.
The jury announced its verdicts after more than five hours of deliberation.
All three former officers who went to trial were found guilty of witness tampering, a felony, for omitting information and making false and misleading statements as the beating was under investigation.
Bean, Smith and Haley were acquitted of violating Mr Nichols’ civil rights causing death – the most serious charge. Haley was convicted of the lesser charge of violating his civil rights causing bodily injury.
Haley was also found guilty of conspiracy to witness tamper.
All three still face second-degree murder charges in Tennessee state court.
Sentencing is set for January. The judge ordered the three defendants to be taken into custody.
During the trial the two officers who pleaded guilty testified against their former colleagues.
The witness tampering charges carry possible sentences of up to 20 years while the civil rights charge against Haley carries up to 10 years in prison.
The Justice Department issued a statement saying it hoped the verdicts provide “some measure of comfort” for the family of Mr Nichols, who was a father of one.
“A basic principle for our system of justice is that there is – and there only can be – one rule of law,” said Acting US Attorney Reagan Fondren for the Western District of Tennessee.
“Law enforcement officers must be held to the same rules as the citizens they’re sworn to protect,” he added.
The five officers, members of a since-disbanded special anti-crime squad called the Scorpion Unit, were captured on video beating Mr Nichols during a Jan 7, 2023, traffic stop near his home.
He died at a hospital three days later.
Vice-President Kamala Harris attended his funeral and Mr Nichols’s relatives were invited to President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address in Washington in 2023. AFP

