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Up to 20 hours of footage from Tyre Nichols’ deadly police beating yet to be released

Up to 20 hours of additional video footage related to the fatal police beating of Tyre Nichols has yet to be released, a prosecutor revealed Wednesday.

The unreleased footage includes audio of what was said after the vicious Jan. 7 beating and during the ambulance ride that brought the 29-year-old black man to the hospital, Shelby County prosecutor Steven Mulroy told CNN.

The disturbing footage released Friday showing Nichols’ traffic stop and beating, however, contradicts what officers said happened in the Memphis police officers’ initial report that night.

“The incident report that has gone public does not match up on all fours with what one sees when one looks at the video that’s already been released,” Mulroy said Wednesday.

Additional charges of “false reporting” related to the first police report are being considered, a spokesperson for Mulroy’s office told CNN. Memphis police and city officials will determine when the unseen footage will be released.

Nichols died on Jan. 10, three days after he was critically injured by five police officers during what turned out to be a deadly traffic stop yards from his mother’s home.

All five officers, some of whom were part of the department’s now-disbanded elite SCORPION task force, have since been fired and arrested on murder charges. Two sheriff’s deputies and two other officers were also placed on leave following the deadly encounter.

Tyre Nichols police cam footage
AP

Three Memphis Fire Department employees were also fired following Nichols’ death after it was revealed that they “failed to conduct an adequate patient assessment on the victim.”

A funeral service held for Nichols Wednesday afternoon in Memphis was attended by some 2,500 mourners and featured a euology from civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton and an address from Vice President Kamala Harris.

top row from left, Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, bottom row from left, Desmond Mills, Jr. and Justin Smith.
AP
RowVaughn Wells, the mother of Tyre Nichols at his funeral service
AP

The service was held at the Mason Temple Church of God in Christ headquarters, best known as being where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop” speech shortly before his assassination.

Tamika Palmer, the mother of Breonna Taylor, and Philonise Floyd, brother of George Floyd, were also reportedly in attendance.

During the service, members of Nichols’ family shared memories of the mild-mannered father-of-one who loved to skateboard.

Tyre Nichols
AP

Nichols’ sister Keyana Dixon said her brother was “robbed of his life, his passions, and his talents, but not his light.” His father, Rodney Wells, said he hopes his son’s death will lead to the passing of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act being passed.

“We have to fight for justice,” Wells said. “We cannot continue to let these people brutalize our kids.”