The screen at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans honors Tyre Nichols before an NBA basketball game between the New Orleans Pelicans and the Washington Wizards. Photo / AP
One of five former Memphis police officers charged over the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols has pleaded guilty in exchange for prosecutors recommending a 15-year sentence.
Desmond Mills Jr entered his plea during a hearing at the Memphis federal courthouse as part of a larger agreement under which he will also plead guilty to related charges in state court. It wasn’t immediately clear if any of the other officers would follow suit.
Attorneys for three of the officers declined to comment and William Massey, the lawyer for Emmitt Martin, said the defence would “stay the course”.
Mills, 33, and his fellow defendants were filmed kicking and punching 29-year-old Nichols after a traffic stop in January. He died three days later.
It was one in a string of violent encounters between police and black people that sparked protests and renewed debate in the United States about police brutality and the need for police reform. The five former officers who were charged are also black.
Mills pleaded guilty to federal charges of excessive force and obstruction of justice and agreed to co-operate with prosecutors. The final sentencing decision rests with the judge. Mills remains free on bail until a sentencing hearing next year.
Nichols’ mother, RowVaughn Wells, shook as she described hearing how five large men beat her skinny son.
“This one today was very difficult for me because this was really the first time I actually heard somebody tell and say what they actually did to my son,” she said outside the courthouse.
“So, this was very difficult. But I’m hoping that Mr Mills, it was his conscience that allowed him to make this plea agreement and not because of his lawyers telling him it was the right thing to do.”
Mills and the four others were charged with using excessive force, failing to intervene, deliberate indifference and conspiring to lie, as well as obstruction of justice. The five –Mills, Martin, Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley and Justin Smith – pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder and other charges in state court. Mills is the first to agree to plead guilty.
Nichols’ mother and her husband said the possibility of 15 years in prison was “a start”. Rodney Wells noted that Mills has a family, with three children aged 6 and younger.
“Fifteen years is a long time with no parole,” Rodney Wells said at the news conference. “That’s going to affect his family, that’s going to affect him.”
Blake Ballin, Mills’ lawyer, told reporters that Mills “understands he did something wrong and he’s taking responsibility for it”. He added that there was “overwhelming evidence of the guilt of people involved here” and, if authorities needed Mills to testify at a possible trial, he would.
Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy said Mills’ co-operation “probably would incentivise” the other officers to consider plea deals too. Mills would also co-operate in the Department of Justice’s investigation into the Memphis Police Department, which Mulroy said should lead to systemic reform.
He said the defendants held “different levels of responsibility” in Nichols’ death and that Mills “is not the worst of the five” charged.
Ben Crump, the lawyer for Nichols’ family, said Mills’ decision continued the “sea change” witnessed after the death of George Floyd, when the Minneapolis police chief testified during former officer Derek Chauvin’s murder trial that he had violated departmental policy, values and principles.
“The precedent that’s being set now – police officers tell the truth, even if that means piercing the blue veil,” Crump said.
The plea agreement sets out Mills’ role in the fatal beating, detailing how he pepper-sprayed Nichols three times before pulling out a baton and yelling, “I’m about to baton the [expletive] out of you.”
He repeatedly struck Nichols, who was on the ground and surrounded by officers, never allowing him to comply with the command, “Give us your hands!”
After the beating, Mills and the other officers failed to tell the responding medics that they had beaten Nichols, instead saying he was on drugs. Meanwhile, they discussed among themselves “taking turns hitting Nichols, hitting Nichols with straight haymakers, and everybody rocking Nichols”, according to the plea deal.
“During these conversations, the officers discussed hitting Nichols to make him fall and observed that, when Nichols did not fall from these blows, they believed they were ‘about to kill’ him.”
Martin used hand signals to indicate to Mills that his body camera was still recording. Mills removed the camera and placed it on the back of a patrol car.
Mills told supervisors at the scene that he knew Nichols was in bad shape and he “expressed concerns about Nichols’ survival”, according to the agreement. When the five officers spoke later, they discussed what the body camera recording might show and conspired to mislead investigators. That included agreeing not to report that Martin had repeatedly struck Nichols in the head.
After Nichols’ death, all five officers were fired from the department and the crime-suppression team they were part of was disbanded. The four remaining officers have a May 6 trial date in federal court. A trial has not yet been set in state court.
The officers said they pulled Nichols over because he was driving recklessly, but Police Chief Cerelyn “CJ’ Davis said no evidence was found to support that allegation. Nichols ran from officers, who tried to restrain him. He pleaded for his mother as he was pummeled just steps from his home.
An autopsy report showed Nichols died from blows to the head, and that the manner of death was homicide. The report described brain injuries, cuts and bruises to the head and other parts of the body.