Daniel Penny to Face Manslaughter Charges for Jordan Neely Chokehold Death
Daniel Penny to Face Manslaughter Charges for Jordan Neely Chokehold Death
The man holding Neely’s arms down then let go and asked Neely if he could hear him. When Neely failed to respond, Penny released him. Seconds later, Penny and the other man moved Neely into a recovery position. After three minutes and 45 seconds of video, Neely’s body contorted and let out a deep breath. The witness who recorded the video later said, “None of us who were there thought he was in danger of dying. We thought he just passed out or ran out of air.”
The Manhattan DA’s announcement came hours after City Council members called for Penny’s arrest.
“We all viewed a lynching for 15 minutes, we understand that was a crime,” council member Kevin Riley said.
“When it happens to us, we don’t get the same justification or the same leeway as our counterparts … I just want the same level of respect that we give other people for Black people,” said Riley, who is co-chair of the council’s Black, Latino and Asian Caucus.
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.) previously called Neely’s death a “public murder,” while the city’s public advocate, Jumaane Williams, had called for charges to be filed against Penny “immediately.”
New York governor Kathy Hochul claimed that Neely died just for “being a passenger” on the subway and suggested it was “very clear that he was not going to, you know, cause harm to these other people.”
Neely was arrested in August 2015 for attempted kidnapping “after he was seen dragging a 7-year-old girl down an Inwood street,” the New York Daily News reported. He pled guilty to endangering the welfare of a child and was sentenced to four months in jail. He was later arrested again in June 2019 for punching a 64-year-old man in the face during a fight in a Greenwich Village subway station, the report adds.
Reddit posts unearthed by journalist Andy Ngo show that subway riders had grown to fear Neely even nine years ago because of his erratic behavior. He was also on a NYC Department of Homeless Services list of homeless people who had dire needs, the “Top 50” list, according to the New York Times.
Jordan Neely Death: Daniel Penny to Face Manslaughter Charges | National Review
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