Leroy N. Soetoro
2024-12-16 19:30:31 UTC
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Permalinkchokehold-verdict-what-will-he-do-now
Daniel Penny, who on Monday was found not guilty of criminally negligent
homicide in the death of Jordan Neely last year, says he wants to resume a
normal life now that the closely watched criminal trial has concluded.
Through his lawyer and in a television appearance after the verdict, he
said he plans to go back to school, become an architect and even resume
riding the New York City subway.
But like many defendants who are acquitted after high-profile and divisive
cases, a sense of normalcy may be hard-won for the 26-year-old former
Marine. Gothamist spoke to high-profile defendants, their lawyers and
media experts who agreed that Pennys case is likely to follow him for
years, and his public reputation may long overshadow his private life.
I don't want any attention. I don't want the limelight, Penny told Fox
Nation on Wednesday. I'd like to just go back to normal, though well
see. Pennys lawyer did not make him available for an interview with
Gothamist.
Neelys family is also struggling to move forward. Neelys father, Andre
Zachery, has filed a civil lawsuit against Penny. When the verdict was
announced, Zachery cried out in court and was escorted from the room.
This really, really hurts, Zachery said a short time later.
When asked if he felt the impact on the Neely familys loss in the Fox
Nation interview, Penny said only, Of course.
Penny was charged with causing Neelys death by holding him in a chokehold
for several minutes on an uptown F train on May 1, 2023. Witnesses said
Neely, a former Michael Jackson impersonator who had schizophrenia,
started yelling threats after he boarded the train. Penny held Neely in
the chokehold on the floor of the train for about six minutes, according
to evidence presented during the proceedings. Neely was pronounced dead
soon after.
A video that a passenger took of Penny holding Neely in the chokehold went
viral soon after the incident, and prompted strong responses from the
public with some seeing Penny as a hero and others seeing him as a
killer. In the days after Neelys death, and before Penny was charged with
a crime, protesters flooded subway platforms in response. Prior to his
trial, Pennys supporters donated more than $3 million to a legal defense
fund on a Christian crowdsourcing website. After the verdict, the amount
grew by more than $360,000.
Perhaps no one knows better what its like to become a lightning rod for
controversy over crime on the New York City subways than Bernie Goetz, who
in 1984 shot four young people he said were trying to rob him on the
subway. At the time, the city celebrated Goetz as the Subway Vigilante
in a time when crime was at a high. Others, however, vilified him. He was
ultimately acquitted of the shootings but convicted of a gun charge.
Goetz, now 77, said whether Penny wishes it or not, he has become a proxy
for peoples feelings about subway safety.
This isn't so much about him, this is about the bullst going on in New
York, Goetz said in a phone interview. The people on the subways are
threatened all the time and should people put up with this?
Goetz said he sympathizes with Penny, and their cases bear many
resemblances. Subway crime rates were high in the 1980s. There was also
widespread fear about subway crime when Neely died in 2023, even though
officials stressed rates of subway crime were lower than they had been
before the pandemic. Both Penny and Goetz characterize their actions as
defensive Goetz defending himself and Penny defending others on the
train. Both were also subject to lengthy public prosecutions.
Goetz said Penny's desire for normalcy will be difficult to realize for
the first several years. Goetz sold electronics to factories and said that
after his trial he lost many of his business contacts in and around New
York City because no one wanted to talk to him.
There was a big drop in business. It basically ruined me. The
prosecutions destroy you financially, Goetz said.
The polarized media market these days allows Penny and his lawyers to seek
out sympathetic outlets to tell his story and drum up support. Penny
turned to conservative outlets Fox and the New York Post for press after
the verdict. Goetz said there was no equivalent in the 1980s, and he still
blames the New York Times for what he felt was negative coverage.
Todays more fragmented media offers Penny niche markets that he can
potentially capitalize on, according to UCLA communications professor Tim
Groeling.
There are people with very narrow interests that are obsessive about
things, Groeling said. You can sustain narrow and deep interest in a
subset of the audience much more easily now than you used to, and dramatic
crimes have the possibility of sustaining that kind of interest.
Groeling points to social media and niche media platforms where chatter
can persist even years after a case is over. For example, he pointed to a
subreddit for brothers Lyle and Erik Menendez, who were convicted of
killing their parents in 1996, that currently has 42,000 followers.
Others have been able to profit from their notoriety and these niche
markets. Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted of two killings in 2020; he became
a star for gun advocates and also sells apparel. And Amanda Knox, who was
accused of killing her roommate in 2007, has since built a media franchise
with books, podcasts, films and speaking engagements dedicated to true
crime stories.
However, Groeling said the fractured media works the other way.
Mr. Penny is going to have people talking about him for the rest of his
life, he said. Praising him or criticizing him, the internet doesn't
forget.
Goetz claimed bankruptcy after the criminal trial and told CNN that he
never paid a penny of the $43 million civil judgement. In addition to
the civil lawsuit from Neelys father, Pennys lawyers say their client is
exploring his own civil lawsuit a malicious prosecution claim against
the prosecutors and the medical examiners. But it has yet to be filed.
Without detailing costs, Pennys lawyers said his legal fund dwindled
during the criminal trial. Others accused of high-profile crimes struggled
to pay the bills after their trial. Casey Anthony, who was acquitted of
killing her 2-year-old daughter in 2008, declared bankruptcy in 2013,
according to the Associated Press, and lived with her defense investigator
and his family for several years following her trial, according to
Buzzfeed News.
George Zimmerman, who was tried for killing 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in
2012, struggled to find employment following his acquittal, according to
his lawyer Mark OMara, who said even he might think twice before hiring
someone with that much notoriety.
I've got 20 people who work for me here, I would have to be a little bit
cautious or careful having someone like Mr. Penny and Mr. Zimmerman or
Casey Anthony here because the notoriety follows them, OMara said.
OMara said there were more than 2,500 threats of violence against
Zimmerman during his trial.
You don't know if it's somebody in Kansas with a borrowed laptop or down
the street with a 9 mm, he said, referring to a handgun. You have to be
aware that there are people who are very upset that Mr. Penny ended up
taking the life of somebody. New York Citys medical examiner said Neely
died from Pennys chokehold. Pennys lawyers disputed that conclusion.
Penny told Fox Nation that he still rides the subway, but added that he
has to look over his shoulder and is concerned for his familys safety.
According to Pennys lawyer, Steven Raiser, Penny paid for private
security during the trial and is still coping with trauma from the
incident and criminal case.
He has, understandably, emotional scars from what occurred and the
attacks on him that persists, people are still in the media attacking
him, Raiser said.
Raiser said that people have continued to donate to Pennys legal fund,
which has grown by almost $400,000 since the verdict. Raiser declined to
say how much remained after the cost of the criminal trial.
--
November 5, 2024 - Congratulations President Donald Trump. We look
forward to America being great again.
The disease known as Kamala Harris has been effectively treated and
eradicated.
We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
stupid people won't be offended.
Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.
Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
fiasco, President Trump.
Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.