welcome to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. i m kim brunhuber ahead on cnn newsroom. [ chanting ] this is the demand of protesters across the united states after the city of memphis releases the harrowing video of a fatal police beating. at the center of it all is this man, 29-year-old tyre nichols. we walk you through the clips of what he endured and where reform needs to begin. and a deadly shooting near jerusalem in a synagogue. across the united states we re seeing anger, we re hearing demands for change, but we re not witnessing the violent demonstrations many feared would come after the public saw those images. memphis officials released over an hour of video that started with traffic stop involving tyre nichols on january 7th. take a look. now there is already a lot of anger toward police over the incident with loud calls for reform. these protesters in memphis, for example, blocked a major bridge for a time, but n
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police who murder must be put in prison. they must face justice. you know, the crowd is here. there are emotions that are high, but they have been nothing less than peaceful. they have just stopped the traffic flow. and part of that is because they want people to see that disruption is part of the way they re going to protest because they are feeling pain and they want people to understand how serious they are about all of what they saw on that videotape. you re hearing them chant, something we have heard across the country from michael brown to george floyd to freddie gray whose streets, our streets. that s what they re chanting. they feel like these are their streets. they re taxpayers too. there s no reason why these five