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Subway Retired Marine Daniel Penny Appears in Court for Manslaughter Charge, Enters His Plea

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A U.S. Marine veteran pleaded not guilty Wednesday to revised charges of putting a man who was behaving erratically in a fatal chokehold on a New York City subway train.

Daniel Penny, 24, pleaded not guilty to second-degree manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide in the May 1 death of Jordan Neely.

Neely, 30, lost consciousness during the struggle, which was recorded by a bystander.

The arraignment lasted mere minutes. Penny, who is free on bond, only uttered the words “not guilty” before he left the courtroom with his lawyers.

Penny was initially arrested on the manslaughter charge in May, but a grand jury earlier this month added the negligent homicide count, potentially giving a trial jury the option of finding him guilty of the lesser charge.

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To get a manslaughter conviction, prosecutors would have to prove Penny recklessly caused Neely’s death while being aware of the risk of serious harm. It could carry a prison sentence of up to 15 years. A conviction for criminally negligent homicide would require the jury to find that Penny unjustifiably put Neely at risk of death, but failed to perceive that risk. The maximum penalty would be four years in prison.

Penny, who served in the Marines for four years and was discharged in 2021, has said he acted to protect himself and others from Neely, who shouted “I’m gonna’ kill you” and said he was “ready to die” or go to jail for life.

“He was yelling in their faces saying these threats,” Penny said in a video released by his attorneys. “I just couldn’t sit still.”

Was it wrong for prosecutors to charge Daniel Penny?

Neely’s family members and their supporters have said Neely, who struggled with mental illness and homelessness, was crying out for help and was met with violence.

“What happened to Jordan was a crime, and this family shouldn’t have to stand by themselves,” Rev. Al Sharpton said at Neely’s May 19 funeral.

Neely’s death aboard an F train in Manhattan quickly became a flashpoint in the nation’s debates over racial justice and crime.

Republican politicians, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, hailed Penny as a hero, while Sharpton and others compared the death of Neely, who was black, at the hands of Penny, who is white, to the 1984 subway shooting of four black men by Bernhard Goetz, a white man dubbed the “subway vigilante” who was eventually acquitted of charges in the shooting except for carrying an unlicensed gun.

The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.

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