Tyre Nichols death: SCORPION Unit 'permanently deactivated'

The five former officers charged in the incident were in the unit.

Officials in Memphis, Tennessee, released dramatic body camera footage Friday of the fatal confrontation between Tyre Nichols and five police officers.

Nichols can be heard screaming "mom" several times during the gut-wrenching clips, which appear to show officers beating and pepper-spraying him after he ran from a traffic stop arrest.

Nichols died at the age of 29 on Jan. 10, three days after the violent confrontation.

The five Memphis Police Department officers involved in his arrest -- Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills Jr. and Justin Smith -- were fired and then charged with second-degree murder in connection with Nichols' death.


No body-worn camera video footage lost: City officials

All of the police body-worn camera footage from the fatal traffic stop of Tyre Nichols has been accounted for, the city of Memphis said in a statement on Sunday.

The initial traffic stop of Nichols involved three officers, including one who did not activate his body-worn camera, city officials said. That camera was not turned back on before the officer left the intersection where the traffic stop occurred, officials said.

Video from the body-worn camera of a third officer was preserved and titled "Video 1" in the public release of it on Friday, officials said.

Only two body-worn cameras were activated after police officers chased and caught Nichols, city officials said. A stationary city security camera captured the officers beating Nichols, city officials said. Those videos, described as Videos 3 and 4, were released to the public.

-ABC News' Stephanie Wash and Whitney Lloyd


'There is more to the story,' state rep says

During a press event with other state and local leaders on Saturday, Tennessee state Rep. G.A. Hardaway said he has questions that have not been answered regarding the timeline and logistics of the Nichols case.

"There is more to the story, and I think that the citizens of Memphis and Shelby County deserve to know the whole story," Hardaway, who represents Memphis, said.

Hardaway said the “only quick turnaround” from police in the case was the information that five officers received administrative discipline. He called for more clarity regarding the chain of command as it pertains to the notification of car chases and violent encounters.

"You can’t get the trust of Memphians and Shelby Countians unless you’re truthful, and you can’t be truthful if you’re not transparent," he said.

--with ABC News' Jianna Cousin


Memphis Police's SCORPION Unit deactivated

The Memphis Police Department has deactivated its SCORPION Unit, the task force at the center of Nichols' death, the department said Saturday.

The decision came after Chief Cerelyn Davis met with other members of the unit, who agreed with the deactivation, according to a statement from the department.

"In the process of listening intently to the family of Tyre Nichols, community leaders, and the uninvolved officers who have done quality work in their assignments, it is in the best interest of all to permanently deactivate the SCORPION Unit," the statement said.

All five officers fired and charged in connection with Nichols' death were in the unit, which had been inactive since the fatal encounter.

The 40-officer SCORPION unit, which stands for Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods, launched in November 2021 and focused on "high crime hotspots," the department said at the time.

Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci, the attorneys representing the family, had repeatedly called to end the unit.

"You have a man literally laying down in distress, dying, and people are just talking like this is business as usual. Had Tyre not succumbed to his injuries, how many more times would they have done this and how many times have they done it before?" he told ABC News on Friday.

Crump and Romanucci said in a joint statement Saturday that they and Nichols' family found the disbandment of the unit "to be both appropriate and proportional to the tragic death of Tyre Nichols, and also a decent and just decision for all citizens of Memphis."



Obama reacts to 'vicious, unjustified beating'

Former President Barack Obama called on people to "reimagine public safety" in response to Nichols' fatal encounter with police.

"The vicious, unjustified beating of Tyre Nichols and his ultimate death at the hands of five Memphis police officers is just the latest, painful reminder of how far America still has to go in fixing how we police our streets," he said in a joint statement with Michelle Obama on Twitter that included a selfie of Nichols by water. "Along with mourning Tyre and supporting his family, it’s up to all of us to mobilize for lasting change."


Nichols' family speaks with ABC News about footage

Tyre Nichols' family spoke exclusively with ABC News' Elwyn Lopez following the release of the body camera footage of his encounter with police.

Rodney Wells, Nichols' stepfather, said the footage justified that his son was not a threat to the officers.

"For an individual to weigh 150 pounds and be brutalized by five officers, [it] is unheard of and we need the public to see it," he told ABC News.

Wells also called for the prosecution of everyone who was seen in the video, including paramedics and other unidentified officers.

When asked about the part of the footage where Nichols was heard crying for his mother, RowVaughn Wells, she told ABC News that she wasn't there for her son.

"I had this very bad stomach pain pit and I didn't know what it was at the time that night," she said. "I didn't realize that I was feeling my son's pain."

Ben Crump, the attorney representing the family, said the video also raised more questions concerning the other officers who are seen confronting Nichols.

He also criticized the attitude of the first responders seen following the beating.

"They were so nonchalant about everything," he said.