A U.S. Justice Department investigation into the Memphis Police Department after the beating death of Tyre Nichols found a pattern of unlawful use of excessive force and discrimination against the Black residents of the majority-Black city in Tennessee.
The Memphis case is one of 12 similar investigations of state and local law enforcement agencies opened by the DOJ since April 2021. Many have been in response to high-profile deaths at the hands of police, including George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. The five other completed investigations all found patterns of illegal police practices.
George Floyd's murder in Minneapolis
died in May 2020 after a white officer pinned his neck to the pavement in Minneapolis for 9 1/2 minutes despite the Black man鈥檚 pleas of 鈥淚 can鈥檛 breathe.鈥 The ensuing global protests, which turned violent at times, sparked a over racism and Officer was convicted of murder.
In June 2023, the DOJ saying the police department in Minneapolis engaged in a pattern of using excessive force and discrimination. The city agreed to resolve the findings through a consent decree with an independent monitor.
The aftermath of Breonna Taylor's death in Louisville, Kentucky
Breonna Taylor was in her home during a raid in March 2020. Federal and state prosecutors have said were justified in returning fire after Taylor鈥檚 boyfriend grabbed a handgun and shot Mattingly in the leg. Taylor鈥檚 boyfriend said he mistook the police for an intruder breaking in after midnight.
The two officers left the department years ago and were not charged with any crimes. Two other former Louisville officers have been accused in federal court of falsifying
In March 2023, the DOJ issued findings that the Louisville Metro Police Department had a pattern of unlawful practices that included executing search warrants without knocking and announcing. The report acknowledged changes already made by Louisville police and identified additional remedial measures that were needed.
A spate of scandals in Phoenix, Arizona
In Phoenix, there wasn't a single episode that led to the . Instead it came after many smaller scandals. A 2020 case accusing 15 protesters of being in an anti-police gang had to be dismissed for lack of credible evidence; in 2017, a 鈥渃hallenge coin鈥 was circulated among officers depicting a gas mask-wearing demonstrator getting shot in the groin with a projectile; and in June 2019, cell phone video emerged showing officers pointing guns when they confronted an unarmed Black couple with two small children they suspected of shoplifting.
This June, the Justice Department issued a report finding that the had a pattern of several unlawful practices. They included unlawfully arresting homeless people and disposing of their belongings, the unjustified use of deadly force, and discrimination against Black, Hispanic and Native American people and those experiencing mental health crises.
City officials have said they are analyzing the report. They have also launched describing the police department's 鈥渞oad to reform鈥 and what they are doing to reduce the number of use of force incidents.
Civil rights violations in Lexington, Mississippi
The DOJ investigation of Lexington, Miss., followed a that accused police in this small, rural town of terrorizing Black residents by subjecting them to false arrests, excessive force and intimidation. The , released in September, said the 鈥渉as created a system where officers can relentlessly violate the law."
The department operates under an unconstitutional conflict of interest because it is partially funded by money raised through fines. Police routinely arrest people who cannot pay fines or who owe outstanding fines and people are jailed without prompt access to court and with no assessment of their ability to pay bail, the report found.
The city and police cooperated fully with the investigation and committed to working with the DOJ to address the violations.
Excessive force in Trenton, New Jersey
In Trenton, N.J. the DOJ just last month that concluded officers in the state's capital have a pattern of misconduct, including using excessive force and making unlawful stops. The report arrests without legal basis, officers escalating situations with aggression and unnecessary use of pepper spray.
Officials said the city has cooperated and will continue to cooperate with the DOJ. Trenton has so far disbanded two police department street units that officials said violated the constitution.
Six more still in progress
Six similar investigations are still in progress.
In Louisiana, the Justice Department a federal probe in 2022 following an into the deadly 2019 arrest of Ronald Greene and at least a dozen cases in which troopers or their bosses ignored or concealed evidence of beatings.
Federal authorities were asked to the Mount Vernon Police Department in a suburb of New York City by the Westchester County district attorney, who the department has a problem with illegal strip searches.
The Special Victims Division of the New York City Police Department in under for following years of complaints about the way investigators treat crime victims.
In Oklahoma, the DOJ is whether the state, Oklahoma City and Oklahoma City police including by institutionalizing them when they could be helped in community settings.
The by white sheriff鈥檚 officers in Mississippi led to a of the Rankin County Sheriff鈥檚 Department. Following , five Rankin officers and one from another department were charged and to terms of 10 to 40 years.
In Massachusetts, federal prosecutors did not point to any specific episode that triggered their into a possible pattern of excessive force and discriminatory policing. The probe followed a filed by a Black man who said he was wrongfully charged with murder based on his race and fabricated evidence.