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What Happened to Tyre Nichols?
Memphis Police, Discharge of Officers, and Charges of Murder, Kidnapping, and More
January 29, 2023
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WHAT HAPPENED TO TYRE NICHOLS? 

You’ve seen the videos and you are shocked. Tyre Nichols was stopped by Memphis police officers, dragged from his car, and savagely beaten by police officers. When he fled, they chased him. He was hunted down, beaten some more as he screamed nightmarishly for his mother, and then left to succumb to his injuries as officers milled about.

The officers involved have been fired and charged with serious crimes: murder and kidnapping among them.

It’s simply another case of police brutality, a shocking disregard of the basic rights of black men – Mr. Nichols, you must know, was black. Never mind that the officers who assaulted him were black. When it comes to systemic racism, it’s turtles all the way down. Racism explains everything, these days, even black on black violence.

Maybe that’s right, but there are questions, questions what will likely be raised at any criminal trial resulting from Mr. Nichols’ death three days later at a local hospital. The pity is that the Memphis Police Department fired the officers before asking these questions.

1

First, why was Mr. Nichols stopped? And why is the first video we see one where not one, but two police cars are next to Mr. Nichols’ stopped car? Is there no audio tape, no body camera from the first officer on the scene? (The video we see is worn by the second officer to arrive). Looking at the videos Memphis released it looks like Mr. Nichols was stopped for no reason at all. If that is so, it is outrageous.

But in the fourth video Memphis chose to release, one officer talks about trying to stop Mr. Nichols while Mr. Nichols was driving. Mr. Nichols reportedly swerved the car he was driving as if to strike the officer’s car. The officer contends he hit his siren to signal the need to stop before Mr. Nichols swerved. If that is true, and it may not be, that might explain the aggression on the part of officers as they approached Mr. Nichols’ car.

2

Second, why did officers want to stop Mr. Nichols in the first instance? Again, no explanation – zero. An officer on the fourth video released by Memphis talks about not finding anything in Mr. Nichols’ car, suggesting that Mr. Nichols might have thrown “it” while he was running after the first struggle with cops. What is the “it”? What did officers think they saw?

3

Third, did any other officers involved in the extraction of Mr. Nichols from his car follow use of force policies they were trained in? Mr. Nichols was issued verbal commands, he was told to get on the ground, hand holds were used to push him down, as Mr. Nichols struggled and resisted, he was tased and pepper-sprayed. I’ve handled scores of police misconduct cases: this all looked by the book. Officers tried and failed to get his hands behind his back, as they are trained to do with a struggling detainee. Still, Mr. Nichols managed to get on his feet and run. Presumably, officers in Memphis had good cause to give chase.

4

Fourth, once Mr. Nichols was found and apprehended at the corner of Ross and Castlegate Lane, how many times and over what period of time was he commanded to show his hands to officer? I counted close to 40 over several minutes. Officers would have good reason to escalate the use of force if they were, in fact, in a struggle with a resisting man at close quarters. One officer said after the melee that Mr. Nichols grabbed for his gun. That may be retrospective bluster, but as the struggle occurred, officers had good reason to escalate the use of force. Officers are trained that close quarter struggles can be deadly.

5

Fifth, how many times was Mr. Nichols tasered and sprayed? How are officers trained to think about a subject who is not subdued by these tools? Did they have reason to escalate the use of force yet more, including the use of a baton? And, if so, did Memphis fail to provide guidance on blows to the head? It’s hard to justify kicks to the head.

6

Sixth, we’ve heard something about the autopsy commissioned by Mr. Nichols’ family, but we have not seen the state’s complete autopsy. What killed Mr. Nichols? What was his blood chemistry? He appears lucid and non-intoxicated when he his dragged from his car. But were there narcotics in his system that might have contributed to his reaction both the force used against him and to his reaction to being tasered?

How Are We to View This?

The few videos we have been shown are disturbing, but they don’t settle what happened to Mr. Nichols and why it happened. Officers are trained in the use of force to subdue a resisting subject. They are taught to use reasonable force. Was this force reasonable given the totality of the circumstances the officers faced on the scene?

In 1984, the United States Supreme Court decided a case called Graham v. Connor. The Court’s analysis of the use of force, an analysis rooted in fourth amendment limits on reasonableness, sheds some light on the questions to be asked now in Memphis. The Court’s language is a warning to the Friday-evening quarterbacks who were so quick to rush to judgment after Memphis released its videos.

“The ‘reasonableness’ of a particular use of force must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, and its calculus must embody an allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second decisions about the amount of force necessary in a particular situation,” the Court said.

“Our Fourth Amendment jurisprudence has long recognized that the right to make an arrest or investigatory stop necessarily carries with it the right to use some degree of physical coercion or threat thereof to effect it…. “The ‘reasonableness’ of a particular use of force must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight,” the decision reads.

The Court also said: “The calculus of reasonableness must embody allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments—in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving—about the amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation.”

And here is the kicker and why I hope the Memphis Five elect to go to trial in the criminal cases rather than enter a plea: “‘Not every push or shove, even if it may later seem unnecessary in the peace of a judge's chambers… violates the Fourth Amendment.”

In other words, context matters. Memphis didn’t give any. Questions remain about why the officers acted as they did. There has yet to be a complete inquiry into what happened to Tyre Nichols. Memphis’ rush to judgment is unseemly.

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LAL Daily — April 5, 2023

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This is a great one. One of our best.

Welcome back to our more premium long form content. Our guest for LAL #081 is Pete Atkinson.

Pete Atkinson represents everything we as a country have to be optimistic about for our shared future. He is Canadian-born and raised in Washington, D.C. Pete currently lives and works north of Chicago. He studied Classics at Ave Maria University, founded a study abroad program in Rome and a Shakespearean acting program in Florida. He earned his Masters in Fine Art and Acting from Columbia. During his time at Columbia, he founded The Merry Beggars, an entertainment production company, which he sold to Relevant Radio in 2021.

Pete hails from a large family and is guided by his faith. Norm and Pete spend a lot of time here, as the overlap of Catholicism and their respective searches for the face of God represent a shared understanding that material, earthly achievements are no refuge for the soul.

You can find Pete on Twitter @petercatkinson and at ...

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Calling All Law Students

Let’s be honest. Summer is rushing by and you are starting to get nervous about what the fall brings. That’s because you are about to head off to law school. You’ve heard the stories: the first year they scare you to death, the second year they work you to death, and the third year they bore you to death. Then you graduate, take the bar exam, and head off into the world of working lawyers.

We are committed at Law and Legitimacy to making sure that the next generation of lawyers are prepared to meet the intellectual, ideological and professional challenges to come. That starts now, with you, a 1L in the making.

We want to know what is going in your law schools. How you are being oriented to the practice of law before classes even begin. What you are being taught in the classroom. What the social milieu is like at your school. Hence, we are looking to create what we will call, in grand constitutional tradition, “committees of correspondence,” at law schools across the country. You can contribute anonymously, pseudonymously or under your own name. The choice is yours.

Send us your class syllabi, reading lists, anecdotes about what is going in the classroom and the cafeteria. Our objective here is to provide an honest critique and a safe port in the ideological storms that are sweeping classrooms across the country. We’ll offer tips on how to survive, how to read a case, whether trying to get on law review is worth the trouble, and what to do when you find out your professor is an ideologue.

You can send material to the links here: [email protected]

Here’s our first tip.

Before classes begin, get yourself a copy of Locke’s Second Treatise on Government and read it. Ask yourself where does public authority come from? What is it? What are its limits? Where do rights come from, and do we have rights independent of those the government grants? Finally, what is the role of government – does it preserve liberty, or serve to promote equality? Can it do both?

The questions Locke raises are fundamental to the law and his influence on American jurisprudence is profound. Several years ago, we tutored a young law student about to attend a top-five law school. The student went on to the law review and a clerkship with a federal appellate judge. The student’s experience motivated us to create this feature.

Law school is a grind. But you can get through it, with honors. It’s all a matter of focus, asking the right questions, and pacing yourself. We can help.

Check out our podcast, Law and Legitimacy, too. We stream live every weekday, Monday through Friday, at 8 a.m. eastern. And each daily stream is available wherever podcasts are found. 

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LAL Hot Takes: The Supreme Court
What the Harvard, UNC Opinions Render About American Society and Culture

              Years ago, many years ago, United States Supreme Court decisions seemed more accessible, and readable. It was almost as if the Court was writing for the general public, trying to cast the law’s sweeping generalities and far-reaching consequences in terms the general public could understand. Now the Justices seem to write for one another, and for legal academics. That’s a loss to the public at large.

                Weighing in at almost 230 pages, the various opinions in the Supreme Court’s recent affirmative action decision involving Harvard University and the University of North Carolina reflect contrasting visions of what the law can and should do in American life. But few people will have the time or inclination to read all the decisions. And we are poorer for it. (The case’s caption, its title, is Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v.  Presidents and Fellows of Harvard College. You can find it by searching the Supreme Court web page and looking for the section on “Opinion”, See SCOTUS.)

                Here’s a hot take on what the case does and does not say, and why it is important.

                The Court struck down the college’s use of race in determining whether a student should be admitted to college, saying that the use of race is contrary to the requirement that all people be treated equally before the law. It expressly adopted a “color-blind” view of the Fourteenth Amendment’s requirement of equal protection of the law. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority opinion. It was followed by concurring opinions, that is opinions by Justice’s agreeing with Robert’s conclusions but offering differing reasons for supporting it. Justice’s Thomas, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh wrote separate concurring opinions.

                Justices Sotomayor and Jackson wrote separate dissents, disagreeing with the majority. Justice Kagan joined the dissenters.

                The decision rehearses arguments that are the despair of law students everywhere. When the Constitution says the no one shall be deprived of equal protection of the law, what does that mean, when it comes to race? Evaluating such questions becomes a question of applying a standard, or lens, through which to view the issue. When it comes to race, the Court applies what is called “strict scrutiny:” to justify something that looks like unequal treatment, a law must identify a compelling state interest, and adopt the narrowest means of achieving it. Common sense, it seems, isn’t the standard.

                What’s the goal of affirmative action? A diverse educational experience. Is that compelling? The decisions disagree. But even if the interest is compelling, does the use of race as a deciding factor in an admission decision serve as the narrowest means of achieving it?

                In the Harvard and UNC cases, the majority said the compelling interest is so vague as to be meaningless, and the means used to achieve it are far too broad, and far too long-lasting. Racial classifications applied in perpetuity foster division, not equality. It is a long-winded way of saying you don’t treat people as equals by treating them as historical tokens that need to be reckoned and scored by standards having little to do with them or their merits.

                The Court did not strike down affirmative action for all time. The decision serves as an invitation to revisit it.

                Justice’s Sotomayor’s and Jackson’s decisions should be must-reading for every American. They write separately that racism isn’t just a stain on the nation’s past, it is a shadow cast over the lives we all live today. Sotomayor writes that the notion of a color-blind Constitution isn’t just wrong, it is dangerous. Justice Jackson recites data and studies that show the vast inequalities ietween the races in American life. Justice Jackson is already sold on the notion of race-based transfer payments, also known as reparations. Her opinion is the opening salvo in the litigation to come on this topic.

                The Harvard and UNC decision is not the end of affirmative action. It will stand as the Roe v. Wade for those who view “racial justice” as the critical issue of our time.  Expect new rounds of litigation to challenge race-based preferences, and to defend them, in Courts throughout the land.

                It is well worth the time, for lawyers and laymen alike, to read this decision -- all of it.  Non-lawyers can skip the discussion of strict scrutiny and legal standards, and wish for a transparent Constitution accessible to all. Justices Thomas’s and Jackson’s opinions present the case for and against affirmative action in concise and meaningful terms.

                As for lawyers, I suggest a reading that focuses on the use of the cumbersome architecture of “strict scrutiny.” Do we really need such arbitrary doctrinal devices? The distinctions between strict scrutiny, heightened scrutiny and rational basis review of are clunky, inelegant and, perhaps, an affront to a Constitution that was supposed to establish limited government.

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What Happened to Tyre Nichols
Memphis Police, Discharge of Officers, and Charges of Murder, Kidnapping, and More

WHAT HAPPENED TO TYRE NICHOLS? 

You’ve seen the videos and you are shocked. Tyre Nichols was stopped by Memphis police officers, dragged from his car, and savagely beaten by police officers. When he fled, they chased him. He was hunted down, beaten some more as he screamed nightmarishly for his mother, and then left to succumb to his injuries as officers milled about.

The officers involved have been fired and charged with serious crimes: murder and kidnapping among them.

It’s simply another case of police brutality, a shocking disregard of the basic rights of black men – Mr. Nichols, you must know, was black. Never mind that the officers who assaulted him were black. When it comes to systemic racism, it’s turtles all the way down. Racism explains everything, these days, even black on black violence.

Maybe that’s right, but there are questions, questions what will likely be raised at any criminal trial resulting from Mr. Nichols’ death three days later at a local hospital. The pity is that the Memphis Police Department fired the officers before asking these questions.

First, why was Mr. Nichols stopped? And why is the first video we see one where not one, but two police cars are next to Mr. Nichols’ stopped car? Is there no audio tape, no body camera from the first officer on the scene? (The video we see is worn by the second officer to arrive). Looking at the videos Memphis released it looks like Mr. Nichols was stopped for no reason at all. If that is so, it is outrageous.

But in the fourth video Memphis chose to release, one officer talks about trying to stop Mr. Nichols while Mr. Nichols was driving. Mr. Nichols reportedly swerved the car he was driving as if to strike the officer’s car. The officer contends he hit his siren to signal the need to stop before Mr. Nichols swerved. If that is true, and it may not be, that might explain the aggression on the part of officers as they approached Mr. Nichols’ car.

Second, why did officers want to stop Mr. Nichols in the first instance? Again, no explanation – zero. An officer on the fourth video released by Memphis talks about not finding anything in Mr. Nichols’ car, suggesting that Mr. Nichols might have thrown “it” while he was running after the first struggle with cops. What is the “it”? What did officers think they saw?

Third, did any other officers involved in the extraction of Mr. Nichols from his car follow use of force policies they were trained in? Mr. Nichols was issued verbal commands, he was told to get on the ground, hand holds were used to push him down, as Mr. Nichols struggled and resisted, he was tased and pepper-sprayed. I’ve handled scores of police misconduct cases: this all looked by the book. Officers tried and failed to get his hands behind his back, as they are trained to do with a struggling detainee. Still, Mr. Nichols managed to get on his feet and run. Presumably, officers in Memphis had good cause to give chase.

Fourth, once Mr. Nichols was found and apprehended at the corner of Ross and Castlegate Lane, how many times and over what period of time was he commanded to show his hands to officer? I counted close to 40 over several minutes. Officers would have good reason to escalate the use of force if they were, in fact, in a struggle with a resisting man at close quarters. One officer said after the melee that Mr. Nichols grabbed for his gun. That may be retrospective bluster, but as the struggle occurred, officers had good reason to escalate the use of force. Officers are trained that close quarter struggles can be deadly.

Fifth, how many times was Mr. Nichols tasered and sprayed? How are officers trained to think about a subject who is not subdued by these tools? Did they have reason to escalate the use of force yet more, including the use of a baton? And, if so, did Memphis fail to provide guidance on blows to the head? It’s hard to justify kicks to the head.

Sixth, we’ve heard something about the autopsy commissioned by Mr. Nichols’ family, but we have not seen the state’s complete autopsy. What killed Mr. Nichols? What was his blood chemistry? He appears lucid and non-intoxicated when he his dragged from his car. But were there narcotics in his system that might have contributed to his reaction both the force used against him and to his reaction to being tasered?

The few videos we have been shown are disturbing, but they don’t settle what happened to Mr. Nichols and why it happened. Officers are trained in the use of force to subdue a resisting subject. They are taught to use reasonable force. Was this force reasonable given the totality of the circumstances the officers faced on the scene?

In 1984, the United States Supreme Court decided a case called Graham v. Connor. The Court’s analysis of the use of force, an analysis rooted in fourth amendment limits on reasonableness, sheds some light on the questions to be asked now in Memphis. The Court’s language is a warning to the Friday-evening quarterbacks who were so quick to rush to judgment after Memphis released its videos.

“The ‘reasonableness’ of a particular use of force must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, and its calculus must embody an allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second decisions about the amount of force necessary in a particular situation,” the Court said.

“Our Fourth Amendment jurisprudence has long recognized that the right to make an arrest or investigatory stop necessarily carries with it the right to use some degree of physical coercion or threat thereof to effect it…. “The ‘reasonableness’ of a particular use of force must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight,” the decision reads.

The Court also said: “The calculus of reasonableness must embody allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments—in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving—about the amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation.”

And here is the kicker and why I hope the Memphis Five elect to go to trial in the criminal cases rather than enter a plea: “‘Not every push or shove, even if it may later seem unnecessary in the peace of a judge's chambers… violates the Fourth Amendment.”

In other words, context matters. Memphis didn’t give any. Questions remain about why the officers acted as they did. There has yet to be a complete inquiry into what happened to Tyre Nichols. Memphis’ rush to judgment is unseemly.

Read full Article
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