CHICAGO — Amid freezing temperatures and chanting “killer cops have got to go,” at least a dozen protesters arrived Friday night outside a police precinct in one of the first planned protests of the Tyre Nichols killing at the hands of Memphis police.

Protests have been planned from coast-to-coast this weekend after law enforcement officials in Memphis released a troubling video in the fatal police beating of Nichols, a 29-year-old Black man who died three days after a traffic stop on Jan. 7.

The video of the killing, which involved five Black officers, shows Nichols being tased, belted with a baton, repeatedly kicked in the face and brutalized despite seeming to put up no resistance.

Memphis police chief Cerelyn “CJ” Davis told CNN Friday that the video shows “acts that defy humanity.”

LIVE COVERAGE:Memphis to release footage of traffic stop that led to death of Tyre Nichols

Chicago protesters arrive amid freezing temps, growing outrage

A dozen people gathered across from a police precinct in Chicago in freezing temperatures Friday evening to protest the killing of Tyre Nichols, as well as call attention to the killing of Anthony Alvarez, who was fatally shot by Chicago police in 2021.

“From Memphis to Chicago, these killer cops have got to go,” the group chanted. Some held signs saying “Justice for Tyre Nichols” and “End police terror.”

Ana Santoyo, 33, a Chicago native running for alderperson, said the killing is another reminder that police brutality is pervasive in the U.S. “It’s not just bad apples. It’s the whole bunch,” she said.