Dec 5, 2024
DOJ Report RAILS Against Memphis Police
A DOJ report concluded the Memphis Police Department uses excessive force and discriminates against Black people.
- 17 minutes
The Department of Justice released its
findings in a civil rights investigation
into the Memphis Police Department,
and it concluded that the police
in Memphis routinely discriminate against
black residents in a 73 page report.
Federal authorities found
that the MPD uses excessive force,
[00:00:19]
discriminates against black people
when enforcing the law, and conducts
unlawful stops, searches, and arrests.
The probe also found
that the agency unlawfully mistreats
people with mental health issues.
Now, this investigation was launched
after 29 year old Tyree Nichols was beaten
[00:00:38]
and killed by Memphis police in 2023.
Body cam footage of the January 7th attack
revealed that during the traffic stop,
Memphis police officers
kicked Tyree Nichols in the head,
hit him with a baton,
doused him with pepper spray, and beat him
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while he cried out for his mother,
leading to his hospitalization and death.
On January 10th, footage of the attack
also showed the officers
issuing Nichols 71 commands, many of
which were impossible to carry out,
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such as showing them his hands
when they were restrained and telling him
to get on the ground when he already was.
And as for the officers
responsible for Nichols death,
the five officers involved in the killing
to Darius been Demetrius Hailey,
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Emmett Martin, Desmond Mills Jr
and Justin Smith were fired and charged
in state court with murder.
Two officers struck plea deals
and three were convicted in October 2024,
including one found guilty of civil rights
abuses and two of witness tampering.
[00:01:44]
Additionally, Axios points out
that the Biden administration
has not done anything to address
the problem of police violence at scale.
The DOJ under the Biden administration
has launched 12 investigations
into police misconduct.
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Conduct, but so far none has resulted in
consent decrees or court ordered reforms.
In fact, police killings have risen
over the past few years,
according to the Mapping Police Violence
Project. 30 more people have been killed
in the US by police through October 22nd,
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2024, then compared to the same period
in 2023, and there have only
been 11 days this year, 2024,
where police did not kill someone.
And you can see that calendar here.
[00:02:34]
I mean, this is a president and an
administration who took office shortly
after the George Floyd uprising in 2020,
who promised to be different
and more compassionate than Trump.
But on a systemic level,
what have we seen beyond photo ops?
[00:02:52]
I mean, they did not deal with with
the cloths, but that's about it.
Yeah. So this is why I get so frustrated.
So when people talk about
criminal justice reform, police reform.
So look, as you guys know,
I thought defund the police
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was not a good slogan, as you guys know.
I thought crime is real and and I,
I never once said that I want misdemeanors
and felonies to be turned
into misdemeanors and people let out.
But you've heard me say
maybe hundreds of times,
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I don't know if I got into the thousands.
Can we please reform the police?
They're shooting people too quickly.
They're beating the living
crap out of people.
And we showed you how many cases?
Hundreds of cases, right?
Tamir rice shot dead in two seconds flat.
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The white guy
in the hotel hallway begging for his life.
They tell him, look, you know,
put your hands up, put your hands down,
and then they murder him, right?
And then, let alone the black guy
in the in in Ohio,
the Walmart goes to buy a toy gun
and they shoot him in two seconds flat.
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And so it's gone on and on and on.
And there's some, police departments,
I think, overwhelming.
I think all of them should be retrained,
retrain all of them.
They're obviously out of control.
But we didn't do any of that.
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So the actual gigantic cancer of a problem
where the police are taught,
hey, better to be, you know,
judged by 12 than carried out by six.
Ha ha ha ha. Go, go!
Shoot and abuse. ET cetera.
People. It's not.
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It hasn't been fixed at all.
So. And every time we do these stories,
guys, it's not just once or twice the
reason that they're the Justice Department
is stepping in with Memphis,
as they did with a couple of other cities,
is because it's systemic.
It's over and over and over again.
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There's another case that
that was cited here.
There's so many cases.
But just as an example,
another guy tased, pepper sprayed,
kicked when he wasn't resisting at all.
He wasn't, you know,
running from the cops in the.
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And the guy who was killed. He didn't.
Some of the folks were like,
oh, he ran from the cops.
He only ran after they pepper sprayed him
and tased him for no reason
when he hadn't done anything to them
and he hadn't done anything physical.
Then he runs, then they literally
kick the living crap out of him,
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and then he dies a couple of days later.
So I'm sick of the police abuse,
and I hate that there hasn't been
any police reform.
Yeah.
Biden at his state of the Union,
I believe in 2021, maybe a misremembering
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the year to, denounce, defund the police,
screamed defund the police.
And, you know, you and I
have gone back and forth on this.
You've you've laid out your case.
I think this is an example of why.
And what we're seeing is why we need
the components within that movement.
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If I understand you don't think
the slogan is helpful, but what people
are arguing for within that movement
is reallocating some of the funding.
I mean, Steven Semler in his Substack
today just showed the military equipment
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and you could just see as the war
on terror and as boots on the ground
started to dwindle in Iraq,
all of these MRAPs started
to appear on city streets.
That's the kind of stuff
people are talking about.
We don't need a militarized police force
showing up in every circumstance.
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And if this is a traffic violation,
do we really need to kill him on the spot?
Absolutely not.
If people are dealing with mental
health issues and they need help,
is somebody with a gun showing up
the best response in that situation?
Someone who doesn't have any training
or and doesn't have any firm commitment
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or a priority to de-escalate.
When people say defund the police,
it's not just abolishing the police.
There are some people,
of course, who want that.
But if you're talking about just funding,
it's reallocating resources,
some of the resources
to overly inflated police budgets
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into other sectors of city governments,
county services, state services,
so that we have a better, more nuanced,
more deliberate, more thoughtful approach
and a more appropriate response
to every different circumstance.
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Someone's holding a bank,
like if someone's robbing a bank
and they're armed.
Yeah, sure.
Maybe then somebody who's armed shows up.
If somebody is having a meltdown,
someone had a mental break
on the sidewalk, someone selling loose
cigarettes, maybe someone who's armed
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does not need to respond.
That's that's what it is.
And I understand you don't like the
slogan, but I think within that, we need
to talk about the components of what
people have been advocating for, and maybe
we can find some cause for agreement.
Do you think maybe some police
departments, especially in major cities,
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should have their funding allocated
to a more robust social services?
- Can we find agreement there?
- I mean, yes and no.
Jordan,
because that's a second layer thing
that that deserves a good conversation
and debate and to follow through with.
[00:08:02]
Wait, okay. How much are we reallocating?
Let's figure out
where to draw the lines on.
And by the way,
when someone is out of control, maybe you
don't want to send someone who has know
what you know who's totally unarmed.
Right. So it depends.
[00:08:18]
So those are interesting
and important conversations
and conversations we should have.
But we're skipping
the most important conversation,
which is redo their training.
Stop telling them to shoot
within two seconds flat.
Stop telling them, hey, you know what?
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You get to beat up anyone you like,
and if anyone even looks at you askance,
kick the crap out of them.
And that's almost.
I know some cops will say,
no, that's not how we're trained.
And there are there good cops
in the country.
Oh, of course, of course there are. Right?
Are there even good police stations,
units, etc.
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That do it right? Of course there are.
And sometimes some of them
have been retrained.
I believe in San Antonio
and have a great result out of that,
but we have to wholesale retrain
all the cops to not abuse the citizens.
To me, that's such an overwhelming
number one priority that we shouldn't
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get distracted by priority number 2 or 18,
because when we do,
we never get the priority number one.
There's a a couple
of different things on the training.
There's a good documentary called
Do Not Resist from 2016 that goes
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into some of these training seminars.
And you see, I mean, I think that we
definitely agree there in many cases,
and especially at some of the more popular
training seminars for police,
they are instructed and encouraged
to act with force and act with violence.
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First, because there's this sense that
they instill in them similar to people who
are like fire teams in a in a battlefield.
You don't know
what's waiting behind that door.
I mean, how many times have we
covered on this network
or and especially on indisputable?
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They do a fantastic job.
Doctor Ritchie does a fantastic job
chronicling incident after incident
of people calling the police for help,
people calling the police for assistance
and then they are killed.
We just had another incident last week.
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That's the type of scenario
someone's calling you for help.
That is a scenario
where the police do not need to respond.
And within the defund the police movement,
it's allocating resources to different
departments so that they can be tasked
with being the first responder in
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situations where people clearly need help.
Yeah, I hear you, brother.
I mean, let's do the retraining first
and then let's have that debate.
We do what we can.
All encompassing approach. Why not both?
No, but we can't.
Because when you say defund the police,
you said it earlier.
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Joe Biden goes fund the police and then
just doesn't do the number one priority.
Doesn't even come close
to doing the number one priority.
But Biden doesn't speak for me.
I didn't vote for him in either election.
Like, why?
Why is Biden's obstinance on this issue
in support of police?
[00:11:00]
That shouldn't dictate how I feel or
what the best policy solution forward is.
Jordan, the minute you turn off the
majority of Americans, they're going to
go, oh, forget it, I'm backing the police.
Let them keep kicking everybody's ass.
Let them shoot people quickly,
I don't care.
Like, like, let's do the retraining, okay.
[00:11:18]
Jordan, can I let me ask you
the question in reverse.
Can we just agree?
Before you get to the 18th priority,
retrain them.
Retrain them. Do we agree on that?
I don't think those are
mutually exclusive though.
Like within any like look at any bill,
any reform bill,
[00:11:36]
any sweeping piece of legislation.
It doesn't give a chronological order.
Many things happen simultaneously.
Yeah.
Look, if you find I'm not stopping you
from saying, hey, we should put some money
into mental health.
Of course we should.
I mean, you want to talk about a holistic
treatment of crime, homelessness, etc.
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We would have many,
many agreements there and we would have
some disagreements there, right?
And if you want to get into that morass
and you think you could pass a bill
despite that morass, bless your heart.
But I'm telling you strategically,
if you don't focus on something that all
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of America agrees with or not all,
but a lot of America agrees with,
which is retrain the cops
so they don't shoot you instantly
and they don't do excessive force.
You're not going to be able to win
on any of those things, Jordan.
Just it's just bad strategy.
[00:12:31]
But here's what no one's running.
No one's running on.
This has to happen.
Then that has to happen.
And then police retraining is later.
I think what we saw, we saw polling in
the immediate aftermath of George Floyd,
because that killing in the video
of it was so visceral for a lot of people
and woke up new people to injustice,
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to police brutality, there was an
opportunity to have a conversation
about how we can take the next steps.
And, you know, the George Floyd Justice in
Policing Act was some sort of a response.
- We didn't get anywhere with reform.
- This isn't because it's wrong.
[00:13:04]
No, I can't let you say that. No we did.
That's a perfect example
of how we blew it.
We had George, like the George Floyd,
galvanized people.
And that's a moment where we could
have pushed through retraining of cops.
Instead, we said, defund the police.
And Biden said, the police.
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And we lost everyone. We lost everything.
No one said defund the police.
Do you know how that bill, that bill died?
Ryan Grim wrote about it in his book.
Lindsey Graham.
Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott leaked
the details after expressing support
publicly leaked the details to build
a whip up fervor against it on the right.
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And that's what killed the bill.
It wasn't.
No one called it defund the police.
Biden didn't call it that.
The Democratic leadership
didn't call it that.
You can point to a handful of progressives
who have used that slogan,
but that's not what that bill was.
I know that's not what that bill was,
but the minute they used
that slogan you just said.
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They said defund the police.
And then it died.
Hey, Jordan, are you claiming
that defund the police as a slogan did not
help the right wing to defeat that bill?
I don't I don't think it really matters.
People can mislead what it is.
You can you can split hairs over a slogan,
but we can talk about we have
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a responsibility to educate people
about what things mean, and we can
talk about these things in substance.
And that's what we're saying.
That's what this is.
We have a responsibility
to not come up with dumb ass slogans
that are counterproductive,
that turn off all Americans and go,
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oh, wait, there's going to be no cops.
I'm super scared.
Okay, then I don't want it.
I don't don't retrain them.
Hey, you guys are killing me.
Terrible strategy.
And for God's sake,
these people are getting beat up
and and abused and killed every day.
[00:14:44]
Can we just retrain them
like most of the country wants
instead of having hypothetical.
Ridiculous conversations
with the worst slogan in the world.
If people went out and deliberately
messaged about what that meant,
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saying, hey, you're spending
most of your tax money,
which is a conversation
that any politician is willing to have
on other issues, especially
if it's about cutting social services.
Oh, I don't want I don't want
your tax money going there.
If you go out and say, hey,
your tax money is paying for a new mRAP
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for your police department, your tax money
is going to overtime for cops who stand
around and play games on their phones.
Shouldn't that go into after
school programs for your kids?
Then you will start to see traction.
People will get it.
It's a politician's responsibility
to sell legislation to sell these ideas
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and advocates can certainly make the case.
But politicians deliberately lied
about what that meant.
They knew what it meant.
They conflated it with abolition
and then people.
People, unfortunately, took the bait.
I'm just telling.
I'm telling you. I've said it repeatedly.
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I've said it on this network for years.
What?
That means we can't pretend
like it means something else.
Of course you, Jordan,
you're not getting it.
When you come up with a slogan that says,
I want to take all funding
away from the police.
People naturally assume that you that
that you're there's going to be no cops.
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And if you say no,
I meant it a different way.
And it is your responsibility
to figure out what was in my head.
And I need you to go
and check a thesaurus.
I need you to go and check whatever
manifesto, and then you'll figure out
that even though I said take away all
funding for police, I didn't mean that.
[00:16:29]
What I meant instead was take away
some funding, put it to the right places.
Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.
And I'm going to come up with like like
so okay.
I mean, so under your logic, can we
say kill the police is our slogan and go,
no, we didn't mean kill the police,
we meant reform the police.
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But you should have read our mind.
And even though our slogan is
so stupid and preposterous, you should.
You have the responsibility
to know that what we really meant.
Why didn't you just come up
with a slogan that you actually mean?
Wow. I know, I'm so.
[00:17:01]
I'm so right wing
for coming up with that idea.
Okay, so for God's sake, do better,
do better so we can pass the laws
so we can actually help people.
We got to take a break.
But just my last point, Jake.
[00:17:16]
- We're going to kill them with kindness.
- Don't kill anyone.
Okay? Even with kindness.
Okay.
Thanks for watching The Young Turks.
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[00:17:47]
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