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While Penny left without addressing the press, Neely’s father expressed his heartbreak at the verdict.
A jury on Monday acquitted Daniel Penny in the chokehold death of Jordan Neely on a crowded F train in a killing that electrified the city.
Penny, a 26-year-old former Marine, walked out of Manhattan Supreme Court a free man after the jury found he was not guilty of negligent homicide, the only remaining charge against him after a judge dismissed the top charge of manslaughter last Friday.
The ex-Marine’s six-minute chokehold of Neely, a homeless Michael Jackson impersonator with a history of mental illness and drug abuse who’d raged on the train before Penny and other passengers intervened but hadn’t physically accosted anyone, triggered contentious debates about public safety on the subways.
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After the jury delivered its verdict, supporters of Neely emerged from the courtroom inflamed, with one woman wailing openly while she was comforted by another onlooker.
“Black folks is gonna have to be on alert now. We’re just going to have to take care of ourselves.” said one woman who identified herself as part of Al Sharpton’s National Action Network but declined to give her name. (Sharpton, in a statement Monday afternoon, compared Penny to “subway vigilante” Bernhard Goetz and said the acquittal represented “the blatant legalization of civilian vigilantism.”)
Penny and his lawyers left the courtroom briskly, without addressing the throngs of reporters gathered outside. He was then spotted having a drink with his defense attorneys, Thomas Kenniff and Steven Raiser, at Stone Street Tavern in the Financial District. The attorneys issued a statement saying “New Yorkers can take some comfort on knowing that we can continue to stand up for one another without sacrificing our rights or our freedoms.”
Just after the verdict was delivered, Neely’s father, Andre Zachery, spoke to reporters outside the courthouse.
“I miss my son. My son didn’t have to go through this, I didn’t have to go through this either. It hurts. It really really hurts,” said Zachery, who’d been in the courtroom throughout the trial. “The system is rigged, come on people.”
Donte Mills, an attorney representing the family in a civil suit filed in Manhattan Supreme Court against Penny last week, urged anyone upset by the acquittal to help a stranger in need, recalling Neely’s last words that he was hungry and thirsty.
“Everybody that’s pissed off at this verdict. I challenge you to go outside today and help one person. That’s my challenge. If you’re angry, if you’re hurt, go help one person. That’s how we beat the system.”
In a statement, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg credited his office’s prosecutors with diligently pulling together the best case they could despite facing threats and harassment over the course of the trial.
“The jury has now spoken,” Bragg said. “At the Manhattan D.A.’s Office we deeply respect the jury process and we respect their verdict.”
Politicians sympathetic to Penny were quick to celebrate the acquittal, with Republican Councilwoman Inna Vernikov calling it “poetic justice” that Penny was represented by Kenniff, who’d been Bragg’s Republican challenger in 2021.
One Man Who Was Willing To Stand Up’
On the afternoon of May 1, 2023, Neely entered the F train shouting that he was hungry and thirsty, and ready to die or go to prison for the rest of his life.
Penny then accosted the angry man, bringing him down and maintaining a chokehold until the police came even as other passengers called out that he was killing Neely.