Politics
Memphis police release Tyre Nichols video

Video of five Memphis police officers punching and kicking Tire Nichols, the 29-year-old black man who died according to police a traffic obstruction escalates was subjected to a brutal beating on January 7th released by the city of Memphis on Friday. Multiple video clips show police kicking Nichols in the head, hitting him with a baton and hitting him while holding him down – ultimately resulting in his death at St Francis Hospital on January 10.
The city released the video — more than an hour of total footage between four clips — Friday at 7 p.m. Eastern time. Three of the clips are from body cameras and contain sound, while one silent clip is from a light pole camera.
Although one of the videos shows the moments before the beatings, the videos don’t show Nichols driving erratically, the reason police gave for stopping him in the first place. Cerelyn Davis, later Memphis Police Chief said NBC that her department could not substantiate this claim.
The five police officers, all black and all fired, were charged with second-degree murder, aggravated assault, aggravated kidnapping, official misconduct and official suppression on Thursday; If found guilty, they face everyone up to 60 years imprisonment just because of the murder charge.
Officers say they didn’t film the first encounter with Nichols, and the start recording after an officer has already pulled Nichols out of his car and reinforcements arrive at the scene. The officers appear to Taser Nichols, after which he breaks free and runs away from the officers. After a brief chase, officers pepper-spray Nichols before beating him.
All five officers belonged to the Memphis Police Department’s SCORPION unit, formed in 2021 and designed to saturate high-crime areas with cops; The unit’s name is short for Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods. The program was suspended after Nichols’ death Washington Post reports.
The disturbing video footage sometimes shows officers holding Nichols while an officer kicks him in the torso and head, hits him with a police baton and punches him. At times, Nichols staggers or tries to get up and yells for his mother. In one video, an officer says he’s going to “fucking beat up” Nichols; Video footage also shows officials speculating that Nichols was high during the encounter. No drugs were found in Nichols’ caraccording to an officer at the scene, and police claims that Nichols grabbed one of the officers’ guns as he tried to run away are also not supported by the video evidence.
A first statement from the police on January 8 describes the beating only as a “confrontation” and does not mention the violence Nichols suffered at the hands of the police, but provides the details that the officers involved were removed from duty and that the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation was handling the case.
A video also shows Nichols wait more than 20 minutes to be transported to a nearby hospital, slumped and propped up next to a police car. According to autopsy reportNichols “suffered from excessive bleeding caused by severe beatings.”
protests – mostly peaceful, as Nichols’ mother RowVaughn Wells and stepfather Rodney Wells demanded – emerged after the videos were released in cities across the country. “I don’t want us to burn down cities, tear down our streets, because that’s not what my son stood for,” Nichols’ mother said Thursday in anticipation of the footage’s release. according to NPR. In Memphis, protesters blocked the I-55 bridge that connects Memphis and West Memphis and crosses the Mississippi River.
Alongside his mother and stepfather Nichols leaves behind a 4-year-old son, as well as a community of skateboarders and friends in his hometown of Sacramento. Nichols was an avid photographer, reports the Associated Press; The night he was pulled over and beaten by police, Nichols was driving home after photographing the sky at a local park. Nichols arrived in Memphis on the eve of the Covid-19 pandemic and ended up staying with his mother and stepfather; He was less than 100 meters from home when he was fatally beaten by the police.
Nichols can be heard in the video attempting to de-escalate the situation and return to his family’s home, telling officers, “I’m just trying to go home.”
Politics
Trump Wanted To Undermine Defamation Laws. DeSantis is Taking Action.

Standing in front of a large American flag an event Promotes civic education “on subjects such as the rights and duties of citizens … and also in understanding the philosophical underpinnings of the American republic,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) made a case for abolishing freedom of the press.
He supports Florida House Bill 991DeSantis explained in his plan to facilitate Maybe sue journalists for defamation most controversial by changing the legal status of anonymous procurement. “If someone is being defamed… if [the journalist is] Using anonymous sources, this may be a guess that this was done with malice,” DeSantis said Thursday. “I think what happened is that corporate media in particular relied on anonymous sources to frame people.”
But don’t worry, discouraging HB 991 from sourcing anonymously “won’t make much of a difference in terms of freedom of expression,” DeSantis added. It will merely “make some people not put out things that are wrong, that tarnish someone’s reputation”.
Of course it will also cause Some people don’t want to post things that are true but unflattering to — or implying — public figures like DeSantis the obvious case that anonymous sourcing proves correct, President Richard Nixon.
This bill isn’t all bad, and there’s fair criticism of the over-reliance on anonymous sources when it comes to trivial matters. But all in all, this bill is an assault on press freedom, and his endorsement by DeSantis suggests there isn’t much daylight between him and his alleged chief rival, former President Donald Trump, on a key constitutional matter.
HB 991 is appropriate in a way. For example, it offers that You don’t become a public figure by giving an interview to the press; to “defend publicly against allegations”; be the subject of a viral video or photo; or holding “public employment other than elected office or appointment by an elected official.”
In other words, being a teacher or a DMV employee does not make you a public figure. Let’s not say that “Central Park Karen” or the “nobody has time for that“Woman. In a libel lawsuit, HB 991 says that without any other kind of fame — any willful entry into public life, such as cultivation of fame or running for office — these people should be treated as private individuals who enjoy a stronger standard of reputation protection.
I’m not sure if this distinction is correct Exactly as written. Protecting people who give a man-in-the-street interview or involuntarily become viral memes makes sense, but police officers strike me as public servants who, because of their unique role, which includes proprietary application heard of violence as public figures should be treated. some critics also argued HB 991’s demarcation could violate Supreme Court precedent. Still, the underlying idea – to specify what it means to be a public figure in a digital age where sudden, unwanted notoriety is possible in ways that have not been the case in the recent past – seems fair .
It’s also fair to say that the media sometimes goes overboard with anonymous sourcing. I thought so myself, particularly during the Trump administration, when comments from unnamed “people close to the President” were regularly the basis for high-profile but objectively low-brow reporting of White House personal drama, mostly telling us, knew what we said before: that Trump was petty, sneaky and ill-equipped for office. A story doesn’t have to reach Watergate’s prominence to justify reliance on sources who don’t consent to being credited, but that hardly means every snippet of anonymous gossip deserves publication.
And yet, as always when fundamental individual rights are at stake, there is – or should be – a yawning gap between them this is a foolish or careless or risky way of exercising this right And we should make this functionally illegalwhich HB 991 almost does with anonymous sourcing.
That’s not the only problem with the bill either. Its determination is a “claim that the Complainant discriminated against another person or group because of their race, sex, sexual orientation, or gender identity.” automatically enough for a libel lawsuit is similarly troubling because of its likely impact on freedom of expression.
Likewise, the mention of “any presentation before an audience” or “statement on the Internet” as a basis for cases of defamation. As a New York Times editorial notes, which could respectively mean “testimony at school board hearings and other public gatherings” or “a tweet or Facebook post written by anyone.” It’s not as bad as in the UK charge of “grossly offensive” tweets, but it’s a step in that direction of public speaking.
It’s also a step in the direction Trump wants to go. “One of the things I will do if I win,” he said said in 2016“I’m going to open up our defamation laws so we can sue them and win big bucks if they intentionally write negative and horrible and false articles.”
The was always a pipe dream, since the relevant laws, such as HB 991 itself, are largely determined at the state level and therefore do not fall within the purview of the President. But the animosity that underpins the threat and Trump’s ability to do so as president restrict freedom of the press with tools that are also used below the Obama And Biden administrationsis pretty real.
That animosity is apparently something DeSantis shares. If elected president, he may resort to the same anti-press tools of surveillance and suppression of dissent. And in the meantime, as governor, he could “open” Florida’s libel laws and do in real life what Trump only imagined.
Politics
Trump's Legal Woes & 2024

Der Kolumnist und Mitherausgeber von RealClearPolitics, AB Stoddard, trifft im heutigen Takeaway-Podcast auf den RCP-Präsidenten und Mitbegründer Tom Bevan, den Leiter des Washingtoner Büros, Carl Cannon, und den Moderator Andrew Walworth.
Politics
Michigan Repeals ‘Right-To-Work’ Law In Major Labor Victory

democrats have taken power in Michigan and they are using it.
On Friday Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) signed legislation repealing the state’s decades-old “right to work,” marking a setback for the state’s conservative movement and a landmark victory for its unions.
“Today we come together to restore workers’ rights, protect Michiganans at work, and grow Michigan’s middle class,” Whitmer said in a statement.
Right to work laws prohibit unions and employers from entering into agreements that require each worker to pay fees under the contract to cover negotiation and representation costs. Unions despise the laws, saying they lead to “free riders,” where workers choose not to pay union dues but still enjoy the benefits of a union contract.
Republican leaders passed the state’s Right to Work Act a decade ago. But once Democrats regained the levers of power after last year’s elections, they quickly set about dismantling it. Both the House of Representatives and the Senate recently enacted repeal laws on party-line votes and sent the legislation to Whitmer’s desk.
Unions welcomed the repeal on Friday. Michigan AFL-CIO chief Rob Bieber said the state has “restored the balance of power” for workers.
“After decades of attacks on working people, it’s a new day in Michigan and the future is bright,” Bieber said in a statement.
right to work Laws were legalized by Congress in 1947 and have since spread to most states, including some with historically strong labor movements like Wisconsin. Michigan Republicans led by the government of the time. Rick Snyder (R) passed Michigan law in 2012, dealing a blow to organized labor in a state that is the heart of the US auto industry.

Bill Pugliano via Getty Images
The Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank, said the law Whitmer signed into law was the first repeal of a state right-to-work law in almost 60 years.
Now that the law is off the books, private sector unions in the state can once again negotiate so-called “union security” clauses. These are requirements that require every worker in the bargaining unit to pay fees to cover the costs associated with negotiating and enforcing the contract. (Michigan’s legislature also voted to repeal the right-to-work law for public sector unions, but that move was only symbolic, as the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the the entire right to work in the US public sector in 2018.)
The Right to Work Act was not Whitmer’s only pro-work move on Friday. She also signed another bill into law that will restore the state’s “prevailing wage law,” which sets minimum wages and benefits for employees on government projects, such as construction and service workers. Such laws, often criticized by conservatives, keep wage rates higher on government-funded construction sites and encourage the use of union workers.
Whitmer’s office said restoring the law would “put more money in people’s pockets” and guarantee Michigan would have a “well-educated, skilled workforce.”
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