Wednesday, November 20

Tire Nichols was a California native and is described by friends and family as a 'beautiful soul' with a creative eye

The Most weekends, Tire Nichols would head to the city park, point his camera at the sky, and wait for the sun to go down, as published by the ABC7 chain.

“Photography helps me look at the world in a more creative way. It expresses me in a way that I can’t describe to people,” she noted on her website.. She preferred the scenery and loved the brilliance of the sunsets more, her family said.

“My vision is to bring my viewers into what I see through my eyes and 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 January 7 when police stopped him. He was only a few minutes from the house he shared with his mother and his stepfather, when five Memphis police officers brutally attacked him.

He died three days later at a hospital, and officers have since been charged with second-degree murder and other crimes.

“No one is perfect, no one. But it was very close,” her mother, RowVaughn Wells, said at a news conference this week, moments after seeing video of her son being beaten. “It was damn near perfect.”

He was the baby of his family, born 12 years after his closest siblings. He had a 4-year-old son and worked hard to improve as a father, his family said.

He was an avid skateboarder from Sacramento, California, and he came to Memphis just before the coronavirus pandemic and got stuck. But he was okay with that because he was with his mom, and they were incredibly close, Wells said. He had his name tattooed on his arm.

Friends at a memorial service this week described him as cheerful and adorable.

“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.

Sometimes it can be a difficult place for younger children. But when Niko Chapman was 10, his parents let him walk to the park by himself as long as they knew Nichols was there.

“You remember people who are very nice to you, and Tire was a very nice person,” Chapman said. “He always made me feel very welcome.”

Chapman’s father, Curtis Chapman, led a youth group at a local church that often met at the skate park for pizza.

Nichols quickly became a regular, bringing his energetic spirit and quick wit to the table. But away from the group, Nichols would often show up at the Chapman house to talk about life, including being a young father.

“What drew me to Tire was that he’s real,” said Curtis Chapman. “He was talking about being a father and wanting to be a good father and seeking advice.”

There was a Bible study on Thursdays that Nichols attended with his friend Brian Jang. One day the group watched a sermon on how the world is full of distractions. Jang said Nichols was so touched that he took out his flip phone and dropped it in a cup of water.

“I thought it was amazing, just to see his growth and his commitment,” Jang said.

The last time Jang saw Nichols was in 2018 in the food court of a local mall.

The two hadn’t seen each other in a while, but Jang said Nichols came up behind her and gave her a big hug as the two caught up with him.

“Honestly, it’s quite devastating to see such a fine human being go through such unnecessary brutality, such unnecessary death,” Jang said.

His mother said she raised him to openly love everyone, 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. hung out with him there. They chatted about sports or life.

Spates was with his wife once when they met Nichols there, and they all talked for a couple of hours. Spates later said his wife commented: “He has such a good spirit and soul and a calm presence.”

Nichols worked second shift at FedEx with his stepfather. Every day, they came home together on their break at 7 pm, and her mother had a meal waiting for them.

Wells said she had offered to buy her son Jordans, the popular sneakers, but he didn’t want them.

“He was just his own person,” he said. “He didn’t follow what the others were doing.”

When I wasn’t working, I would go to the park to skateboard and take pictures. His website, called This California Kid, begins with an invitation: “Welcome to the world through my eyes.”

He included a gallery of what he considered his masterpieces: black-and-white bridges and train tracks, 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. A quote from another photographer stands out: “A good photographer must love life,” he wrote.

In the video, which was released Friday, Nichols is heard saying she just wants to go home, family attorneys said. She was less than 100 meters from her mother’s house.

The lawyers described the last words Nichols is heard saying: calling her mother three times.

“Oh my gosh,” she wailed as they spoke. “Oh Lord.”

She still finds herself waiting for him to walk in the door every day at 7 pm “It’s not even real to me right now. I don’t have any feelings right now,” she said. “I know my son Tire is no longer here with me. He will never walk through that door again.”

Read more
* Memphis authorities release video of violent police arrest that killed Tire Nichols
* Memphis cops pepper-sprayed themselves during Tire Nichols arrest: video
* Activists take on LAPD after Tire Nichols beating video released