
Tyre Nichols remembered as beautiful soul with creative eye
On most weekends, Tyre Nichols would head to the city park, train his camera on the sky and wait for the sun to set.
' Photography helps me look at the world in a more creative way. It expresses me in ways I cannot write down for people,' he wrote on his website. He preferred landscapes and loved the glow of sunsets most, his family has said.
'My vision is to bring my viewers deep into what I am seeing through my eye and out through my lens,' Nichols wrote. ' People have a story to tell, why not capture it.'
Nichols, a 29-year-old father, was on his way home from taking pictures of the sky on Jan. 7, 2023, when police pulled him over. He was just a few minutes from the home he shared with his mother and stepfather, when he was brutally attacked by five Memphis police officers.
He died three days later at a hospital, and the officers were charged with second-degree murder and other offenses and fired. Two of the officers previously pleaded guilty in both state and federal court. The three others were acquitted Wednesday of all state charges, including second-degree murder. The trio still face the prospect of years in prison after they were convicted of federal charges, though they were acquitted of the most serious charges there, too.
'Nobody's perfect, nobody. But he was damn near,' his mother, RowVaughn Wells, said at a news conference in 2023, moments after she watched the video of her son being beaten. 'He was damn near perfect.'
He was the baby of their family. He had a 4-year-old son and worked hard to better himself as a father, his family said. He was an avid skateboarder from Sacramento, California, and came to Memphis just before the coronavirus pandemic and got stuck. But he was fine with it because he was with his mother, and they were incredibly close, Wells said. He had her name tattooed on his arm.
Friends at a memorial service in 2023 described him as joyful and lovable.
'This man walked into a room, and everyone loved him,' said Angelina Paxton, a friend who traveled to Memphis from California for the service.
Growing up in Sacramento, Nichols spent much of his time at a skate park on the outskirts of the city. It could be a rough place sometimes for younger kids. But when Niko Chapman was 10 years old, his parents would let him walk to the park alone as long as they knew Nichols was there.
'You remember people that are really kind to you, and Tyre was just a really kind person,' Chapman said. 'He just always made me feel really welcome.'
Chapman's dad, Curtis Chapman, ran a youth group at a local church that would often meet at the skate park for pizza. Nichols quickly became a regular, bringing his energetic spirit and quick wit. But away from the group, Nichols would often show up at the Chapman house to talk about life — including coming to grips with being a young parent.
'What drew me to Tyre was just — he's real,' Curtis Chapman said. 'He would talk about being a dad and wanting to be a good dad and seeking advice.'
There was a Bible study on Thursdays that Nichols would attend with his friend Brian Jang. One day, the group watched a sermon about how the world is filled with distractions. Jang said Nichols was so moved by it that he pulled out his flip phone and dropped it in a cup of water.
'I thought it was awesome, just seeing his growth and his commitment,' Jang said.
The last time Jang saw Nichols was in 2018 at the food court in a local mall. The two hadn't seen each other in awhile, but Jang said Nichols came up behind him and gave him a big hug as the two caught up.
'It's honestly pretty devastating to see such a good human go through such unnecessary brutality, such unnecessary death,' Jang said.
His mother said she raised him to love everyone openly — until they give you a reason not to. So Nichols was quick to make friends.
In Memphis, Nichols went to Starbucks every morning, and Nate Spates Jr. would hang out with him there. They chatted about sports or life. Spates was with his wife once when they ran into Nichols there, and they all talked for a couple of hours. Afterwards, Spates said his wife commented, 'He's got such a good spirit and soul and calm presence.'
Nichols worked second shift at FedEx with his stepfather. Every day, they'd come home together on their break at 7 p.m., and his mother would have a meal waiting for them.
Wells said she'd offered to buy her son Jordans, the popular athletic shoes, but he didn't want them.
'He was just his own person,' she said. 'He didn't follow what anyone else was doing.'
When he wasn't working, he went to the park to skateboard and take pictures. His website, called This California Kid, starts with an invitation: 'Welcome to the world through my eyes.'
He included a gallery of what he considered his masterpieces: bridges and railroad tracks rendered in black and white, the neon lights of Beale Street at night. He took pictures of pink flowers, sunsets over the Mississippi River, fields of grass, statues of Elvis. He highlights a quote from another photographer: 'A good photographer must love life,' it begins.
After she watched the video of her son's death, she stood with her family and their lawyers at a lectern, shaking, to convey what the world lost.
A lawyer described the beating shown in the video — 'he was a human piñata' — and Wells turned her head away, burying her face into her hands.
In the video footage, which was released to the public, Nichols is heard saying he just wants to go home, family lawyers said. He was less than 100 yards from his mother's house.
Lawyers described the last words Nichols is heard saying — calling for his mom, three times.
'Oh my God,' she wailed as they spoke. 'Oh my God.'
She still finds herself waiting for him to walk in the door every day at 7 p.m.
'It's not even real to me right now. I don't have any feelings right now,' she said. 'I know my son Tyre is not here with me anymore. He will never walk through that door again.'
___
AP reporter Adrian Sainz contributed from Memphis, and AP researcher Rhonda Shafner from New York. Loller reported from Nashville, Beam from Sacramento, California, and Galofaro from Louisville, Kentucky.
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She said he was "choking" her "really hard" and she remembered grabbing his arm but then passed out,' police wrote. From there, her memory of Ihsan's attack ended, and she only knew what happened by watching the video of her boyfriend and classmates heroically saving her life. But the attempt on her life was not over, as Zahraa allegedly seized her and tried to finish the 'honor killing'. '[The girl] said she also recalled someone else grabbing her but she didn't know it was her mom at first,' police wrote in the report. 'Someone pushed them to the ground, and then her mom started to choke her and was screaming in her ear. 'Her mom wasn't choking her that hard and she was trying to tell her mom she was choking her but she couldn't say anything.' The girl then described how her eldest sister Haneen, 21, who is not charged with a crime, allegedly tried to fight off students trying to stop Zahraa. As she tried to get to her feet, she said Haneen was yelling at her boyfriend not to touch Zahraa or herself. '[The girl] said she got up and Haneen was grabbing onto her and when she let go she and ran and she was screaming,' police wrote. The girl and her boyfriend ran inside the school with Zahraa in hot pursuit, but her mother was prevented from entering out and the campus put on lockdown. 'She explained her neck felt heated, it hurt badly, her throat was sore, she was in pain, had scratches on her neck, dirt on her hands and leaves in her hair,' police wrote. '[The girl] said said the scariest part was blacking out because she didn't know if she was going to wake up again. 'She also said she "never thought he would hit me or choke me".' The girl told police she feared being abused and killed if she got on the plane to Iraq with her family, which was why she fled. 'Men think they can control women and the women can't do anything about it,' police wrote that she told them. '[She] explained forced marriage is a part of their religion and her parents were in a forced marriage and they are cousins. 'She said for "us" (women) if she had sex with more than one person "she dies" but men are treated differently and she explained they can have more than one sexual partner.' The girl also detailed her father's alleged threats to kill her for dating an American boy, and refusing an arranged marriage. She said his threats escalated after the September 15 incident and an altercation outside the school between her boyfriend and Zahraa the next day. Ihsan was so furious he pulled her out of school for the weeks until the October 18 attack. 'If I could kill you, I would kill you, but I can't do that. I can't do that because there's cops and CPS people involved right now because of you,' she claimed he said. 'And I can't touch you because you will immediately go to the school.' The girl told police Ihsan another time told her he wanted to 'hurt her so badly but there are cops here' but also told her how he would 'kill her no matter what happens' and he 'did not care if anyone saw him'. '[The girl] said the reason why her father threatened to kill her [was] because she has made 'trouble at home' and he believes she is trying to 'separate the family',' the report alleged. She said one time her dad caught her using a cell phone and dragged her by the hair, which caused her to 'hit the wall' and hurt her knee. Police bodycam footage obtained by the Daily Mail showed officers arriving at the school and arresting Ihsan, who demanded to speak to his daughter. 'Just let me tell her to come home - not like that. If I tell her to go home, she will go home,' he insisted, but police ignored him. Officers then had to deal with Zahraa and Haneen, who were hysterical and only left after Zahraa was allowed to speak to Ihsan. Police did not realize Zahraa also allegedly tried to kill her daughter until four days later, leaving her free to continue looking for her daughter, who was in hiding. Zahraa drove her youngest children, two boys aged five and three, into Canada and dropped them off with an Ihsan's brother and mother, who lived there. She then returned to Washington before trying to cross into Canada a second time with a 'notable quantity of baggage' on the night of October 22, but was arrested by customs officers. The boyfriend suffered a boxer's fracture as he tried to get Ishan off his girlfriend, and bruises and scratches on his head and face. The girl spent four days in St Peter Hospital for treatment after a strangulation exam, having complained of neck, throat, and jaw pain, and had difficulty swallowing. Hospital staff listed her injuries as including redness and abrasions to her face, head, shoulders, neck, scalp, and under her chin. She also had suffered burst blood vessels in her eyes and an eyelid droop. 'She believes she lost consciousness three to four times during the incident,' court documents alleged, adding that at one point she woke up with dirt pressed into her face. '[The girl] stated that she thought she was going to die.' Victor Barnes, the boyfriend's father, explained that his son started dating the girl in February 2024, and her family kept it a secret from Ihsan, who was often out of town running his business. 'He's an abusive man. So they just didn't tell him because... they may think he'll fly off the handle and do something crazy like he did,' he said. Ihsan was not initially charged with attempted murder, and released from jail on October 24 on just a $150,000 bond after a hearing in Thurston County Superior Court before Judge John Skinder. Zahraa faced a different judge - Christopher Lanese - on the same day, but she was charged with attempted murder and held on $500,000 bail. Almost two weeks after his release, on November 5, second-degree attempted murder was finally added to Ihsan's charges. Ihsan was re-arrested and his bail raised to $1million, which was too much for him to pay. He remains in jail, while Zahraa's bond was unchanged.