Franco Luciano
2024-11-02 10:29:38 UTC
Reply
PermalinkDaniel Penny âdid for others what we would want someone to do for usâ â defending panicked subway riders from an âunhingedâ Jordan Neely â when he put the troubled homeless man in a fatal chokehold, his defense attorney said Friday.
Pennyâs lawyer Thomas Kenniff â during opening remarks at the former Marineâs high-profile Manhattan manslaughter trial â painted his client as someone who felt compelled to intervene to ensure other riders werenât harmed by the raving Neely, making him not quite a hero but definitely not a killer.
âThis is a case about a young man who did for others what we would want someone to do for us,â Kenniff told the jury of 12 Manhattanites who will decide whether Penny, 26, ârecklesslyâ caused Neelyâs death last May.
Prosecutors, in their own opening statements, argued Penny was indeed âcriminally reckless,â holding a 30-year-old Neely down for nearly six minutes â despite knowing his actions could be fatal â because he didnât ârecognize his humanity.â
âMr. Penny was so reckless with Mr. Neelyâs life because he didnât recognize his humanity,â Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Dafna Yoran told jurors.
Kenniff, during his 20-minute remarks, said his client heard Neely say âI will killâ on the crowded F train and âthere was only one thing that Daniel Penny could do.â
When a âseething, psychoticâ Neely first got into the northbound train on May 1, 2023, he demanded food and money from other riders and spoke about going to Rikers Island and being sentenced to life imprisonment â before threatening to âkill,â Kenniff claimed.
This all while the passengersâ âfear turns to outright panicâ â including a mother who huddled behind a bench to protect her baby, the defense lawyer said.
Penny âsummoned the courageâ to act, and while âthat doesnât have to make him a hero ⊠it doesnât make him a killer,â Kenniff argued.
But Yoran, during her 40-minute openings, blasted Penny for going âway too farâ when he âtook it upon himself to take down Mr. Neely, to neutralize him.â
Penny kept Neely âin a deadly chokeholdâ for five minutes and 53 seconds after nearly all of the trainâs passengers had fled when the trainâs car doors opened onto the platform, she said.
The prosecutor said Pennyâs âindifference towards Mr. Neely, the man whose life he was literally holding in his hands, caused him to disregard the most basic precautions and needlessly kill him, long after any threat he had posed had already dissipated.â
Yoran laid out the evidence the DAâs office will present against Penny at trial, including two videos filmed by bystanders â one of which showed the âlife being snuffed outâ of Neely, which the prosecutor called âthe most critical piece of evidence at trial.â
The first witness called to testify â in the trial that is expected to last around four weeks â was NYPD Officer Teodoro Tejada, who responded to the Broadway-Lafayette station, where the train was stopped, searched Neely for a weapon, but only found a muffin in his pocket.
Jurors were shown footage from Tejadaâs body camera, showing medics attempting to revive a lifeless Neely using various tools including, chest compressions, CPR, a defibrillator and even a shot of the drug Narcan.
Tejada testified that Neely initially had a âfaint pulseâ when first responders arrived â but that officers could no longer find a pulse minutes later.
The video also depicted a composed Penny standing by calmly, chewing something like gum while the EMTs worked on Neely.
Neelyâs dad, Andre Zachery, cried as he sat in the courtroom gallery watching the video showing his son lying dead on the dirty train car floor.
Jurors heard later in the day from two more police officers who arrived on the chaotic scene, and two witnesses from the MTA, who were called to talk about the transit authorityâs inner workings.
Penny faces up to 15 years behind bars if convicted.
He has pleaded not guilty and has maintained his actions were not racially motivated.
Kenniff has previously argued Neelyâs toxicology reports confirmed he had the drug K2 in his system when he died and was âexperiencing a psychotic episodeâ when he boarded the train.
Neely, a former Michael Jackson impersonator had a long history of mental health illness, and was on a city roster of people on the streets who desperately needed help, The Post previously reported. The city Department of Homeless Servicesâ âTop 50â list details which people are cycling in and out of homeless shelters and mental health treatment centers.
As Penny walked into the lower Manhattan courthouse just before 10 a.m. Friday, he was met by a group of Black Lives Matter protesters demanding his conviction.
The group â holding signs saying âJustice for Jordan Neelyâ and âConvict Daniel Pennyâ â variously chanted phrases including, âsubway strangler,â âbeing homeless is not a crime,â and âsay his name: Jordan Neely.â
Neely family lawyer Donte Mills said Penny was trained as a Marine in martial arts, as well as first aid, but failed to use it to help Neely.
âHe used his martial arts training to kill Jordan Neely and did not use his first aid training at all because he didnât think that Jordan was worth it,â Mills claimed outside the courthouse.
âHe was worth hurting, but he wasnât worth trying to save. Thatâs why heâs going to be found guilty after this trial.â
Neely's family did nothing to help him. They dumped him on the street and made him a welfare recipient.
https://nypost.com/2024/11/01/us-news/daniel-penny-did-what-we-would-want-someone-to-do-for-us-when-he-intervened-to-stop-ranting-jordan-neely-on-nyc-subway-lawyer/