MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Video released Friday shows Memphis police officers brutally beating a 29-year-old Black man, shouting expletives and using pepper spray and a baton on him while he called out for his mother in a traffic stop that left him hospitalized and, three days later, dead. 

Police struck Tyre Nichols at least 13 times, kicking his face, side and head, punching his head and chest, and striking him with a baton. After the beating, as Nichols sat propped up against a police car moaning in pain, police gathered nearby, calling Nichols names, checking on each other and laughing.

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Nichols, an avid skateboarder and FedEx worker who had a 4-year-old son, was hospitalized in critical condition after he was beaten. 

Police Chief Cerelyn “C.J.” Davis called the incident “heinous, reckless and inhumane.” Civil rights attorney Ben Crump called the video “appalling” and compared the assault to the 1991 police beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles.

Five former officers, who were fired last week, were charged Thursday with second-degree murder and other crimes in connection to Nichols’ death.

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‘I didn’t do anything:’ First video shows initial stop of Nichols

The first video is from an officer’s body camera and lasts about 11 minutes. It shows at least three officers approaching a vehicle stopped at a red light. Officers pull Nichols from the vehicle as he yells, “I didn’t do anything.”

Multiple officers forcibly push him to the ground, yelling expletives. Nichols responds in an even tone that he is on the ground.

The officers push him down further, with hands on his back, arms and shoulders. One says, “B—– put your hands behind your back before I break them.”

“You guys are really doing a lot now,” Nichols says. “I’m just trying to go home.”