The Murder of Eric Garner! [MERGED]

gene cisco

Not A BGOL Eunuch
BGOL Investor
Still no arrest, but they are having a bridge march. System has nothing to worry about. Just marching and chanting. :smh:

Police in propaganda mode now. Don't care if he had 8 arrests for selling untaxed cigarettes. Victimless crimes like selling drugs/untaxed cigarettes should not be met with lethal force. End of story.
 

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Mother of Eric Garner says NYPD did not give special treatment during traffic stop

Gwen Carr dismissed a report that officers gave her preferential treatment after an Oct. 21 traffic stop. Police-union officials charge cops were forced to repair the busted headlight to help the 65-year-old Carr avoid a summons.
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Gwen Carr says she did not ask for "anyone to do anything for me."

The mom of NYPD chokehold victim Eric Garner says the kind-hearted cops who fixed her broken car headlight were under no orders from police brass.

Gwen Carr, speaking Saturday at the National Action Network, dismissed a report that officers gave her preferential treatment after an Oct. 21 traffic stop.

“I didn’t ask anyone to do anything for me,” Carr insisted. “As the police explained, it was a courtesy on their end.”

Police-union officials charge cops were forced to repair the busted headlight to help the 65-year-old Carr avoid a summons.

Carr also refuted charges that she dialed Staten Island’s top cop from the scene after police pulled her over.

“I don’t know the commander’s number,” she said. “I would have never even thought about calling the commander. For a light bulb?”

Carr said she remains upset by the lack of criminal charges against even a single suspect in her son’s July 17 death.
 

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'I CAN'T BREATHE!' Eric Garner Case No Indictment!
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A New York Grand Jury declined to issue an indictment for the NYPD Officer in the Choke hold death of Eric Garner. So much for body cams being the solution! Here's Tim's Take!
 

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LIVE BLOG: Protesters fill streets of NYC, arrests made following Garner grand jury decision


Thousands across New York and the nation are reacting to the grand jury’s decision not to indict the officer involved in the death of Eric Garner.

Protesters took to the streets of New York City in a peaceful demonstration Wednesday night demanding justice for Garner.

At one point, demonstrators shut down the West Side Highway.

Latest stream of developments below.
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Eric Garner’s stepfather: ‘They killed my son’
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Al Sharpton announces National March in Washington DC for Saturday, Dec. 13
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Frank Serpico, the corruption-busting former NYPD detective, says grand jury Garner decision no surprise: 'Cops say all the time shoot first, ask questions later'

Cowardly cops living by the 'shoot first, ask questions later' mantra put the good guys in a bad light and threaten the public's right to justice.
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Cowardly cops 'don't belong in the uniform', according to retired NYPD Officer Frank Serpico.

Was I surprised by the Staten Island grand jury? Of course not. When was the last time a police officer was indicted?

This is the use of excessive force for no apparent reason on a guy who is selling loosie cigarettes; what is the threat to your well-being? If a police officer's life is in danger, he has every right to use every force in his means to defend himself.

In the old days, they used to put a gun or a knife on somebody after a shooting. Now they don't even bother.

But today, we have cops crying wolf all the time. They testify "I was in fear of my life," the grand jury buys it, the DA winks and nods, and there's no indictment.

I remember a guy I worked with back in the 81st Precinct, an ex-Marine named Murphy. He would not turn out for roll call until his shoes were spit-shined, and his uniform was creased.

Eric Garner lost his life on July 17, when a cop caught him in a deadly chokehold.
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Eric Garner lost his life on July 17, when a cop caught him in a deadly chokehold.
One night, he was called to a family dispute. There was a man waiting behind the door, and he came out with a butcher knife and slashed Murphy's face.

Murphy could have emptied his gun in him. Instead, he disarmed the man and put him in cuffs. What's happening today in the performance of some officers can only be described as sheer cowardice. They don't belong in the uniform, and they shouldn't have weapons — whether they're cops or not.

I hear cops saying all the time — and they're proud of it — "shoot first, ask questions later."

They say, "It's my job to get home safe." Yes, but not at the cost of a human being who never posed a threat to you in the first place.

Garner was initially approached on suspicion of selling 'loosies,' single cigarettes from packs without tax stamps.
ACQUIRED BY: TOMAS E. GASTON
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Garner was initially approached on suspicion of selling 'loosies,' single cigarettes from packs without tax stamps.
I called for, way back when before the Knapp Commission, for an independent investigative body. When I was testifying about police corruption, I saw very clearly how the DA can lead the grand jury in any direction they so desire.

The people want justice, and they need justice. And the police are supposed to be protecting their civil rights

Why would a kid in the inner city call a cop? When I was growing up, my mother would say "Any problem, call a cop." He would show up and assess the problem, and you wouldn't become the victim.

I want to be clear. I'm not talking about all police. There are plenty of good police, and I hear from them on a daily basis.

Michael Brown, 18, was shot dead by a cop in Ferguson, Mo., on Aug. 9.
BIG'MIKE JR BROWN VIA FACEBOOK
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A 'nervous' rookie cop, in a tragic misfire, fatally shot unarmed Akai Gurley without a word of warning in a Brooklyn housing project stairwell on Nov. 20.
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Michael Brown (left) was shot dead by a cop in Ferguson, Mo., on Aug. 9, while a 'nervous' rookie cop fatally shot unarmed Akai Gurley (right) without a word of warning in a Brooklyn housing project stairwell on Nov. 20.
But the police are becoming our enemy, and society is becoming the enemy of the police.

Somebody with clear, objective and impartial thinking needs to come to their senses and find a solution.

Corruption-busting former NYPD Detective Frank Serpico, whose exploits were made into a best-selling book and a movie with Al Pacino, retired from the force in 1972.
 

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Eric Garner’s family thanks supporters, asks them to remain peaceful

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HARLEM (AP) — Eric Garner’s mother and widow say they have been overjoyed to see thousands of marchers protesting peacefully after a New York City grand jury declined to indict a police officer in Garner’s choking death.

Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, said Saturday it “warmed her heart” to see so many people protesting after Wednesday’s announcement that a Staten Island grand jury would not indict the police officer who choked Garner as he gasped “I can’t breathe.”

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Eric Garner's mother, Gwen Carr, acknowledged the overwhelming support she and her family have received in a National Action Network rally in Harlem Saturday morning. (Photo: CNN)

Eric Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, acknowledged the overwhelming support she and her family have received in a National Action Network rally in Harlem Saturday morning. (Photo: CNN)

Garner’s widow, Esaw Garner, said she saw demonstrators from her apartment window and told her son, “Look at all the love that your father’s getting.”

The women spoke at the Rev. Al Sharpton’s Harlem headquarters.

Sharpton and Garner’s family members planned to lay a wreath later Saturday at the site of his July 17 death.
 

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Fanny pack links protester to two sucker-punch attacks on NYPD cops during protests of Eric Garner decision

WARNING: GRAPHIC LANGUAGE Watch the video of a protester punching an NYPD sergeant in the side of the head during a Dec. 4 demonstration at the Staten Island Ferry's Whitehall terminal. Cop sources say that a suspect arrested for socking a cop at a Union Square protest that day, Yotameli Sayer, 22, of Bushwick, was also charged with the ferry terminal assault because of the fanny pack he wore, sources said.

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Re: The Murder of Eric Garner: Updates, Reactions and Predictions: TTL SHOW 1:59:20

@Anonthemovement
Day: 153 #MikeBrown
Day: 176 #EricGarner
Day: 92 #VonDerritMyers
Day: 120 #DarrienHunt
Day: 157 #JohnCrawford
Day: 5 #JohnQuintero

I think they forgot a few, or just left out the certain killing until further information is confirmed...



Ezell Ford - Aug 12, 2014
Kajieme Powell - Aug 19, 2014 (this was suicide)
Antonio Martin - Dec 19, 2014
 

geechiedan

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
sad. i thought this case would get an indictment.

if the question the jurors had to answer was

1. did the cop have intention to kill garner

2. was the hold he used illegal

then the very possible answer is no and no resulting in no indictment.

BUT I think the question should have been were cops harrassing him. There is the thing of reasonable suspicion and garner was arrested for that violation a number of times before but in the moment of that incident were they just on him for being in the area or was he caught red handed again??

Bilal Khalil, 40, the owner of 4 Brothers Clothing — who moved his business down the block over the summer — said he never complained about Garner.

“He was friend,” Khalil said. “I knew Eric. I knew him for a long time,” he added. “I would have never called the police on him.”

Other store owners on Bay St. said they didn’t complain to police about Garner or untaxed cigarette sales.

But the 311 tip made its way to Banks’ office where “the untaxed cigarette problem on Bay St.” was discussed, a source said. A day after the 311 call was made, cops arrested Garner for selling cigarettes without proper tax stamps.

Cops found him in possession of 23 sealed packs of untaxed cigarettes and one open pack, officials said. He was arrested with untaxed cigarettes again on May 7, officials said.

Then, a week before his death, Garner was “warned and admonished” about selling untaxed cigarettes, a police source said.

“Every time you see me you try to arrest me,” Garner told Officer Daniel Pantaleo and a second cop before he was put in the chokehold, according to a video first posted by nydailynews.com. “I’m tired of it. It stops today.”

http://www.nydailynews.com/new...
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if Garner was caught red handed and had been arrested for the same offence at least 4 or 5 times and arrested over a dozen times in his lifetime...why resist now? I'd like to know if he ever had a history of resisting arresting before if not then why was that day different? Did the cops catch him red handed that day or were they just on him because he was busted a few times before?
 

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Officer in Eric Garner death has 24-hour NYPD protection, panic button because of death threats, court docs reveal



Wednesday, June 17, 2015, 10:02 PM
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The police officer under federal investigation for the choking death of Eric Garner is getting 24-hour protection from the NYPD because of death threats, according to court documents released Wednesday.

In an affidavit filed in Manhattan Supreme Court, Daniel Pantaleo says the NYPD has stationed two cops in a patrol car outside his Staten Island home to keep him and his family safe. The department also installed surveillance cameras and a panic button in the house, he says.

He also complains that he’s been “harassed, embarrassed and subjected to character assassination” — problems he blames on the Civilian Complaint Review Board, not his own actions in the notorious Garner case.

Pantaleo, 30, made the disclosures in court papers urging state Supreme Court Justice Alice Schlesinger to reject a request by the Legal Aid Society to make public the number of complaints that have been made about him to the CCRB.

Legal Aid lawyers also want to know if any of the complaints were sustained and if so, how many.
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Pantaleo said CCRB data about him has already been leaked improperly and, as a result, a Michigan man was arrested earlier this year and charged with threatening to behead him.

That man has been undergoing psychiatric evaluation.

“Because certain CCRB records have already been improperly released, without my knowledge or permission, I have actually been harassed, embarrassed and subjected to character assassination,” Pantaleo wrote.

Pantaleo became a lightning rod on July 17, 2014, when he put the 43-year-old Garner in an apparent chokehold on a Staten Island street, and a video captured the confrontation.
Pantaleo became a lightning rod on July 17, 2014, when he put the 43-year-old Garner in an apparent chokehold on a Staten Island street, and a video captured the confrontation.
“There is no doubt in my mind that the information . . . (sought by Legal Aid) will be used to continue to harass and embarrass me, creating a continued serious risk to the personal safety of myself and my family.”

Pantaleo became a lightning rod on July 17, 2014, when he put the 43-year-old Garner in an apparent chokehold on a Staten Island street, and a video captured the confrontation.

Garner — who pleaded, “I can’t breathe”— died a short time later.

A grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo on criminal charges in December, setting off a wave of protests around the country. He’s still being investigated by the feds.

Legal Aid attorney Cynthia Conti-Cook told Schlesinger last month that the public should be able to know at least how many complaints there have been against Pantaleo, and whether any were sustained. She said that’s essential for there to be an informed public debate about whether the CCRB is functioning well as a vehicle for handling civilian complaints about alleged police misconduct.

The review board and city attorneys oppose the release of any information, saying such complaints are part of an officer’s personnel records and state law prohibits their disclosure.

Schlesinger said that before she decided, she wanted to hear from Pantaleo and his union lawyers and she agreed to make Pantaleo a party to the case. That means that if she rules against him, he will have a right to file an appeal.
 

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Daniel Pantaleo — cop who dodged charges in Eric Garner's death — disciplined by NYPD for bogus stop-and-frisk
BY Ryan Sit
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Monday, April 4, 2016, 10:26 PM
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Staten Island man dies after NYPD cop puts him in chokehold (HD)
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Officer Daniel Pantaleo has been disciplined by the NYPD — but it’s not for his role in Eric Garner’s chokehold death.

Pantaleo, who is still waiting to find out if he’ll face federal civil rights charges in the Garner case, was docked two vacation days for a bogus stop-and-frisk.

The incident happened June 27, 2012, more than two years before Garner was killed on Staten Island July 17, 2014.

ERIC GARNER'S GIRLFRIEND CALLS FOR INDICTMENT OF COP DANIEL PANTALEO

The decision against Pantaleo wasn’t reached until March 11, 2015.

The NYPD said he was found guilty of conducting an unnecessary frisk but not guilty of charges that the stop was unjustified.

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Jeff Bachner/for New York Daily News
NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo had been disciplined by the NYPD — but not for the deadly chokehold he put on Eric Garner in 2014.
Pantaleo abused “his authority in that he frisked a person known to the department without sufficient legal authority,” according to a personnel order dated Feb. 26.

It was not entirely clear why the decision and the two-day penalty were not posted on the NYPD’s official personnel orders, which the media can review, until almost a year after the case was adjudicated.

Typically, there is a lag of several weeks.

CUOMO'S SPECIAL COUNSEL PLAN FOR POLICE SHOOTINGS SLAMMED BY FAMILIES OF NEW YORKERS KILLED BY COPS

A department spokesman said the delay was unintentional and that it was caused by a paperwork backlog.

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Video shows Eric Garner struggling as police attempt to arrest him in July 2014.
Pantaleo dodged criminal charges when a Staten Island grand jury decided not to indict the officer, who is seen on video grabbing Garner by the neck as he and other officers try to arrest him for allegedly selling untaxed cigarettes.

Pantaleo isn’t entirely out of the woods.

As the Daily News first reported, federal prosecutors have begun presenting evidence to a grand jury to determine if Garner’s civil rights were violated.

The prosecution team is being led by Forrest Christian, a veteran prosecutor in the Justice Department's civil rights division, along with Taryn Merkl and Nicole Argentieri from the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office, who both have extensive experience in organized crime cases.

The feds are also using an Army pathologist, Lt. Col. Philip Berran, to review forensic medical evidence in the case.

rsit@nydailynews.com
 

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Eric Garner's daughter blasts Mayor de Blasio: ‘Just cause you love black p---y don’t mean you love black lives’
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The daughter of Eric Garner, Erica Garner (pictured), blasts Mayor de Blasio on Twitter for withholding the history of her father’s cop who killed him after saying, "Just cause you love Black pussy don’t mean you love Black lives."
(MICHAEL SCHWARTZ/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS)
DENIS SLATTERY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, September 8, 2016, 11:12 PM

The daughter of Eric Garner blasted Mayor de Blasio Thursday for not releasing disciplinary records on the cop whose chokehold led to her father’s death.

Erica Garner was beyond blunt in her brutal assessment of the mayor, saying she felt betrayed by the decision to suddenly abide by a long-ignored law.

“Just cause you love Black p---y don’t mean you love Black lives... cc @BilldeBlasio,” Erica Garner wrote on Twitter.

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Eric Garner: Remembered Two Years Later
NY Daily News
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De Blasio’s wife, Chirlane McCray, is African-American.

Cuomo says record of cop who choked Garner should be released

“God has a way of exposing fraud ... Bill De Blasio can say whatever he wants. Black people here get no justice in his administration in NYC,” Garner, 26, added.

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Erica Garner says she felt betrayed by Mayor de Blasio for obeying a law that withholds her father’s cop’s disciplinary records.
(SUSAN WATTS/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS)
The activist is the eldest daughter of the 43-year-old Staten Island man who died after being put in a chokehold by NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo in July 2014.

The city’s decision to withhold disciplinary records on Pantaleo — including appealing a judge’s order to release the records — has sparked outrage among police reform activists, as well as Garner’s family.

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The daughter of Eric Garner blasted Mayor de Blasio after tweeting, "Just cause you love Black p---y don’t mean you love Black lives."
(VIA TWITTER)
The mayor claims he’s barred from releasing the records because of a state law that the NYPD and the city ignored for nearly 30 years.

De Blasio ripped for withholding chokehold cop's record

De Blasio, and the NYPD, insist Section 50-A of the state civil rights law prevents the records’ release.


28 PHOTOSVIEW GALLERY
One year anniversary of Eric Garner's death

A spokesman for the mayor said the NYPD was for years in violation of the law, and is changing its practice to comply. On Thursday, Gov. Cuomo argued the law never stopped the release of similar files in the past. “The law hasn’t changed,” Cuomo said.

“Many, many years the NYPD disclosed the information. The NYPD now looks at the law and makes a different determination.”

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Erica Garner posted on Twitter, “Cuomo is a b---h! so is De Blasio! They be pimpin Black lives for votes too… JUST LIKE #HILLARY!”
(VIA TWITTER)
De Blasio said he wants to release the records but can’t because of the law.

Cops involved in Eric Garner's death shouldn’t hide behind law

“Cuomo and De Blasio can only agree one one thing and that is covering up this modern day lynching by their henchman!” Garner wrote Thursday.

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Screen grab from the video that shows Eric Garner's violent arrest.
She also brought up the mayor’s son, Dante. “The thing that kills me is that De Blasio is raising a Black man..This is the example... My dad lays down and rolls over for white supremacy,” she added.

The mayor declined to comment on the critical tweets.

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Justice Department to charge cop in death of Eric Garner
By Larry Celona and Jamie Schram

October 25, 2016 | 6:45pm | Updated

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Washington-based federal prosecutors plan to aggressively pursue charges against NYPD cop Daniel Pantaleo for the chokehold death of Eric Garner on Staten Island, a law enforcement source told The Post on Tuesday.

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Daniel PantaleoPhoto: YouTube
“It’s going to happen sooner than later,” the source said of an indictment. “Washington wants to indict him.”

Federal investigators in Brooklyn were replaced by DC counterparts because of their reluctance to bring charges, the source said.

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The New York feds are privately seething. They accused their Beltway colleagues of trying to “make an example out of Pantaleo” at any cost, said one source familiar with the case.

“We already … came to a conclusion which they didn’t like. It’s truly disgraceful what they’re doing,” the source said.
 

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Trump administration likely to decide fate of Garner chokehold cop
By Joe Tacopino

January 14, 2017 | 12:01am
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Garner chokehold cop's lawyers grilled over disciplinary records
Pastor wants cop who killed Eric Garner 'immediately terminated'
Chokehold cop hopes Trump Administration drops Eric Garner case
De Blasio heaps praise on Loretta Lynch for taking over Garner case

NYPD cop Daniel Pantaleo reportedly will not be charged or cleared in the death of Eric Garner before Attorney General Loretta Lynch leaves office next week, leaving the matter to the Trump administration — which may not be inclined to proceed in the case.

Lynch had made the decision to move forward with the case too late in her tenure and investigators were not given enough time to present evidence to a grand jury, according to The Washington Post.

Donald Trump’s expected attorney general, Jeff Sessions, is not likely to press charges against Pantaleo due to Sessions’ public stance on civil-rights cases and opposition to hate-crimes laws.

Pantaleo’s lawyer said shortly after the presidential election that he was “cautiously optimistic” that a Trump administration might drop the case.

A Staten Island grand jury failed to indict Pantaleo in the 2014 death of Garner, which was ruled a homicide after the cop placed Garner in a chokehold
 

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Board recommended discipline for Officer Daniel Pantaleo years before fatal Eric Garner chokehold: report
X
Stephen Rex Brown Jillian Jorgensen Graham Rayman
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Tuesday, March 21, 2017, 7:37 PM

The cop who choked Eric Garner to death in Staten Island in 2014 had four civilian complaints substantiated against him, but was only docked two vacation days as punishment, documents revealed on Tuesday show.

The documents related to Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo were sent to ThinkProgress.com by an anonymous Civilian Complaint Review Board employee, according to the website.

In all, seven CCRB complaints — including 14 allegations — were made against Pantaleo before the fatal encounter with Garner, the website said.

“Someone should have taken a look at his record a long time ago,” Garner’s mother Gwen Carr said. “If they had done that maybe my son would still be alive.”

Chokehold cop's pay rises after killing Eric Garner

While the CCRB didn’t deny the authenticity of the documents, the Daily News couldn’t independently verify they were legit.

Civil rights attorney Joel Berger called the reportedly leaked documents a major revelation.

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Newly obtained documents appear to detail the disciplinary history of Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who choked Eric Garner to death on Staten Island in 2014. Pantaleo is seen here leaving his Staten Island home on July 2, 2015.
(Jeff Bachner)
“These are red flags,” Berger said. “Someone should have taken notice.”


The disclosure infuriated Patrick Lynch, head of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association.

Eric Garner's widow to play herself in film acting out mock trial

"The leak of such information is simply another demonstration of the CCRB's inability to function in the fair and impartial manner prescribed by the City Charter,” Lynch said. “Their ineptness is well documented.”

Lynch called for a criminal investigation into the leak.

Mayor de Blasio declined to comment Tuesday afternoon, saying he just learned that “information had been leaked.”

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Pantaleo applied an NYPD-prohibited chokehold during Garner's July 17, 2014 arrest.
CCRB Special Adviser and Secretary to the Board Jerika Richardson would not comment on the content of the records, but said that “if a current or former CCRB staff member were to leak or unlawfully take confidential investigation records, he or she would be subject to termination and possible criminal prosecution.”

Meanwhile, Mayor de Blasio said on NY1’s Road to City Hall Tuesday night that he would speak to Police Commissioner James O’Neill about Pantaleo’s record. He also said NYPD training has improved since Garner’s death.

“It’s a very different NYPD,” he said. “We have a very different approach. We also note that as a result of all these changes, complaints against officers have gone down and we have a stronger CCRB.”

Pantaleo confronted Garner on July 17, 2014, for selling loose cigarettes outside a Tompkinsville beauty supply store. The 43-year-old father of six — as shown in a viral video first reported by NYDailyNews.com — pleaded for his life after Pantaleo put him in a chokehold.

“I can’t breathe,” Garner said repeatedly.

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Garner and his wife, Esaw.
The medical examiner’s office ruled his death a homicide.

A Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo. The civil rights investigation has been open for nearly three years.

The leaked CCRB report comes as Legal Aid pressed a judge to order the city to release NYPD disciplinary records. In August, The News reported the NYPD was withholding the disciplinary records of officers, citing Section 50-a of the 1976 state Civil Rights Law. Before that, the NYPD made some information available.

Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Joan Lobis seemed skeptical of the city’s claim that NYPD lawyers realized last year they were violating the law for decades.

“It just bothers me,” Lobis said. “ ‘Oops, we’ve been doing this for 40 years and maybe we’ve been messing this up, we don’t have to give this info out?’ Nobody ever complained about it before.”
 

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Eric Garner’s mother meets with Trump aide Omarosa Manigault to get update on federal probe into son's death
garner.jpg

Gwen Carr said White House staffer Omarosa Manigault had promised to look into the high-profile death of Carr’s son Eric Garner.
(Jefferson Siegel/New York Daily News)
Adam Edelman
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Wednesday, March 22, 2017, 5:11 PM

Gwen Carr, the mother of Staten Island chokehold victim Eric Garner, visited the White House earlier this week in search of an update about the ongoing federal grand jury investigation into her son’s 2014 death.

Carr told the American Urban Radio Network Wednesday she was at the White House Tuesday, meeting with White House aide Omarosa Manigault, who personally phoned the Justice Department on Carr’s behalf “to find out what’s happening with the case.”

“She was going to look into my son’s case,” Carr said of Manigault, the reality TV star who served as President Trump’s director of African-American outreach during the campaign and then secured a job in the administration doing public engagement. “She had made a couple of phone calls.”

Carr said she was attempting to make contact with someone in the Justice Department so she could ask them “to be fair.”

Eric Garner case still being investigated by Trump Justice Dept.

“I want them to look into my son’s case objectively, and I’m hoping we get a positive outcome,” she told the radio network. “To see that the police officers that day that caused my son's death stand accountable for their gross misconduct and are punished for it."

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Carr said Manigault, the “Apprentice” winner turned White House political operative, had “made a couple of phone calls” to Justice Department officials regarding Garner’s death.
(JOHN TAGGART / POOL/EPA)
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer confirmed that Garner met with someone at the White House on Tuesday, but wouldn’t comment further.

But he seemed to indicate that a meeting between anyone from the White House and Carr would be improper.


“For us to get involved in a specific case would be highly inappropriate,” Spicer said at his daily briefing, before referring questions to the Department of Justice.

Revelations about Officer Pantaleo's record before Eric Garner

A Justice Department spokesman didn’t respond to questions about any efforts Manigault made on Carr’s behalf.

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In now-infamous footage, NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo was caught applying a fatal, department-prohibited chokehold to Garner.
Carr, 67, didn’t immediately respond to questions either.

Garner, her son, died after being placed in a banned chokehold by NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo on Staten Island in July 2014.

Garner’s death was ruled a homicide by the medical examiner, but Pantaleo avoided a criminal trial when a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict him.

Eric Garner's mom vows to oppose Trump: 'We are the resistance'

A federal civil rights probe was launched months after the 43-year-old’s death, but no formal actions have been taken.

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Trump made waves last week when he booted Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, whose office was investigating Garner’s death at the hands of police in Staten Island.
(JONATHAN ERNST/REUTERS)
Former Attorney General Loretta Lynch took over the federal probe into Garner’s death from Brooklyn federal prosecutors and the FBI in October 2016, but was unable to complete it before she left office in January.

A federal grand jury is still investigating Pantaleo for Garner’s death, but questions have emerged as to whether Trump’s recently confirmed Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who is considered more police-friendly than Lynch, will continue the investigation.

A former federal prosecutor told The News last month that the federal government can pull the plug on a grand jury presentation anytime.

Eric Garner's widow to play herself in film acting out mock trial

Carr, as well as Garner’s children, elected officials and community leaders, have called for federal indictments against Pantaleo, who was recorded with his arms around Garner’s neck, and the other officers involved.

On Monday, Carr went before a judge on civil disobedience charges — stemming from an arrest during a protest outside Trump Tower on Jan. 31 — and used the attention to vow carrying on her cause.

“We believe that we have a right and we are the resistance," she said outside Manhattan Criminal Court after accepting a conditional dismissal deal.
 

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Three years ago today, Eric Garner died after being put in a chokehold by an NYPD officer in Staten Island. It was a case that drew international attention and sparked days of protests against police brutality.
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NYPD waffles on reinstating cop in Eric Garner case
By Tina Moore

May 11, 2018 | 2:18pm | Updated


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Kizzy AdonisR. Umar Abbasi
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NYPD sergeant’s discipline over Garner death draws backlash from union

The NYPD sergeant in charge of the scene where Eric Garner was killed in 2014 was told she could finally return to active duty — only to have police bosses renege on the deal when she showed up for her gun on Friday, sources said.

When The Post reported on Sgt. Kizzy Adonis’ plight online hours later, the decision was reversed again, and her status was restored.

Adonis, a 15-year veteran, had been in departmental limbo on desk duty since Garner’s July 17, 2014, death on a Staten Island sidewalk. She had never been charged criminally or by the NYPD in the case, which sparked anti-police protests around the nation.

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On Thursday, Adonis was issued a new, laminated NYPD ID card as a full-duty sergeant — and she was recertified at the police-shooting range in preparation for getting her gun back, said Ed Mullins, president of the Sergeants Benevolent Association.

She showed up at 1 Police Plaza on Friday expecting to learn her new precinct assignment and collect her service weapon.

Instead, she was told she wa still on “modified duty” — and officials took back the ID card, Mullins said.

The Post asked the NYPD for an explanation, and a spokesman would only confirm her modified status.

By late Friday afternoon, her full-duty ID was suddenly reinstated, though she had yet to be assigned to a new job or get her gun back.

“Amazingly, The Post ran the story and the sergeant was fully restored,” Mullins said. “Clearly the story had an impact to the decision making.”

Mullins earlier complained about the NYPD’s waffling.

“I think this is indecisiveness on behalf of this department,” he said.

“There is clearly a lack of leadership. They’re messing with someone’s life.”

Adonis could still be hit with an NYPD charge of failing to supervise the scene.

But any departmental case against Adonis and accused chokehold cop Officer Daniel Pantaleo has been on ice for four years, pending a possible federal prosecution.

It’s not clear when that will happen.

As recently as April, federal prosecutors were split on whether charges should be brought in the case.

The NYPD declined Friday night to comment on Adonis’ apparent reversal of fortune.

But Mullins is chalking it all up to miscommunication.

“The brass has no idea what they’re doing,” he said. “They’re like the gang that couldn’t shoot straight.”

Additional reporting by Laura Italiano
 

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FILE - In this July 7, 2015 file photo Gwen Carr holds a picture of her son, Eric Garner, during a news conference outside New York Gov. Andrew Coumo’s New York office. The New York Police Department says it’s moving ahead with disciplinary proceedings against a police officer accused in the chokehold death of Garner, an unarmed man. A letter dated Monday, July 16, 2018, from an NYPD lawyer informed the Department of Justice that it would no longer wait for federal authorities to decide whether to charge Officer Daniel Pantaleo in the Garner case. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File) Bebeto Matthews AP
NATIONAL
Officer in Eric Garner death to face disciplinary proceeding
BY TOM HAYSAssociated Press
July 16, 2018 06:31 PM


NEW YORK
The New York Police Department announced on Monday that it will allow disciplinary proceedings to go forward against a patrolman accused in the notorious chokehold death of an unarmed black man, saying it's run out of patience with federal authorities' indecision about whether to bring a criminal case.

On the eve of the four-year anniversary of Eric Garner's killing, a pointed letter from the NYPD's top lawyer informed the U.S. Department of Justice of an administrative case that could result in dismissal for the white officer, Daniel Pantaleo, because "there is no end in sight" to the federal probe.

Typically, the department waits for federal prosecutors to conclude civil rights violations inquiries before taking action. But other probes have taken far less time than the case of a victim whose dying words, "I can't breathe," became a slogan for the Black Lives Matter movement.


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"Based on our most recent conversations, it has become clear that a definite date by which time a final decision by the U.S. DOJ will be rendered in this matter cannot be predicted," Lawrence Byrne, deputy commissioner for legal matters, wrote to prosecutor Paige Fitzgerald.

"The NYPD has come to the conclusion that given the extraordinary passage of time since the incident without a final decision on the U.S. DOJ's criminal investigation, any further delay in moving ahead with our own disciplinary proceedings can no longer be justified," Byrne added.

A police watchdog agency, the Civilian Complaint Review Board, will prosecute Panteleo under a memorandum of understanding with the NYPD, according to Byrne.

In a statement, the DOJ said it already told the Police Department in the spring it could go forward and that the move "does not have any bearing on the decision-making timeline."

A lawyer for Pantaleo, who's been on paid desk duty, declined comment on Monday. Pat Lynch, head of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, called on DOJ to close its case but said that the officer deserves due process in the disciplinary process.

There was no immediate comment from an attorney for Garner's family, which received $5.9 million from the city in 2015 to settle a wrongful death claim.

"We want to see this done. ... We want justice," Garner's mother, Gwen Carr, said at a press conference Monday with the Rev. Al Sharpton, who praised the move but also called on the U.S. attorney general to move forward with federal action.

The family and police reform activists have expressed deep frustration over the inaction by federal authorities and the NYPD after a state probe ended without criminal charges.

The 43-year-old Garner, who was accused of selling loose, untaxed cigarettes, was stopped by police on Staten Island on July 17, 2014, and refused to be handcuffed. Pantaleo is seen on a widely watched cell phone video putting Garner in an apparent chokehold, which is banned under NYPD policy.

The heavyset victim, who had asthma, is heard gasping, "I can't breathe." He was pronounced dead at a hospital. The medical examiner ruled the death a homicide caused in part by the chokehold.

Garner's death sparked angry protests about the treatment of black men and boys at the hands of white police officers.
 

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The New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board is the largest independent police oversight agency in the country. Its role is to investigate, mediate, make findings and when necessary, recommend action on complaints against police officers.

In this edition of News Closeup, hear from Dr. Fred Davie, the man at the helm of the agency that has investigated some of the most controversial cases of police misconduct in the city’s history, as the board prepares to take on the case against an officer involved in the chokehold death of Eric Garner four years ago.

Then: Much remains to be learned about the causes of Alzheimer’s disease and at the moment there is no known cure. But each year brings new advances for early diagnosis and new treatments.

A number of new developments came out of this week’s Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Chicago. Hear from Dr. Anafidelia Tavares, director of programs for the New York chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association, about those important breakthroughs.
 

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NYPD Chief Surgeon determined Pantaleo didn’t perform a chokehold on Garner: attorney

By ROCCO PARASCANDOLA and THOMAS TRACY
| NEW YORK DAILY NEWS |
APR 04, 2019 | 10:58 AM


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NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo is seen waving to officers assigned to protect him as he leaves his Staten Island home on Thursday, July 2, 2015. (Jeff Bachner/New York Daily News) (Jeff Bachner for New York Daily News)



The NYPD’s chief surgeon determined that NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo didn’t use a chokehold against Eric Garner, Pantaleo’s attorney said Thursday.

The bombshell announcement came during a status hearing at NYPD headquarters in Lower Manhattan on the upcoming department disciplinary trial against Pantaleo.

Defense attorney Stu London said NYPD Chief Surgeon Eli Kleinman was asked by Police Commissioner James O’Neill to review the notorious video of the clash between Pantaleo and Garner — first seen on the Daily News’ website — that shows the July 17, 2014, encounter in Staten Island.

After reviewing the video, Kleinman said Pantaleo never put Garner into a chokehold, London said at a hearing at One Police Plaza.

PAID POST

The lawyer dropped the news at a departmental hearing for Pantaleo, who next month will stand trial, accused of violating department guidelines by using excessive force -- a banned chokehold.

It was not immediately disclosed if Kleinman is expected to testify at Pantaleo’s disciplinary hearing, which will take place in the next few weeks.

Pantaleo is fighting the allegations that he used a banned chokehold on Garner, whose death after repeatedly gasping “I can’t breathe” sparked worldwide outrage.

Pantaleo grappled with Garner, 43, in the midst of arresting him for allegedly selling loose cigarettes in the Tompkinsville neighborhood.

[More New York] City school aide accused of having sexual relationship with underage teen »
The city Medical Examiner said Garner died from a chokehold complicated by health issues. Garner’s death was ruled a homicide.

A Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo in Garner's death.

The case led to demonstrations and fueled the nationwide “Black Lives Matter” movement.
 

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PANTALEO TRIAL: Eric Garner's family comments on the start of the disciplinary trial for NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo in connection with Garner's death. More: https://7ny.tv/2LFEp14




Protesters block FDR Drive as Officer Pantaleo's disciplinary trial begins in Eric Garner death
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Video from Katie King / @missmetaverse shows protesters blocking FDR Drive as the disciplinary trial for Officer Daniel Pantaleo gets underway.



By Eyewitness News
Updated an hour ago
NEW YORK (WABC) -- Protesters blocked traffic on FDR Drive as the disciplinary trial got underway for the NYPD officer accused in connection with the death of Eric Garner.

Traffic cameras showed a small number of demonstrators blocking FDR Drive at 25th Street.


The protest, which included members of the activist group Black Lives Matter Greater New York, began around 9 a.m. Monday. There were no immediate reports of arrests.


Candace McCowan reports on the trial.



Officer Daniel Pantaleo is accused of using a banned chokehold during the incident that led to Garner's death in July 2014.

Garner was the unarmed black man whose pleas of "I can't breathe" became a rallying cry against police brutality.

Pantaleo could face penalties ranging from the loss of vacation days to firing if he's found to have violated department rules. He is not required to be in court as it is a departmental trial. He denies wrongdoing.

WATCH: Garner family supporters speak out after start of disciplinary trial


A ruling last week requires that the police watchdog agency bringing the case prove not only that Pantaleo violated department rules, but that his actions fit the criteria for criminal charges. Pantaleo does not actually face criminal charges.


Pantaleo has been on desk duty since Garner's death.

Garner's mother Gwen Carr says it has been a long five years.


Gwen Carr speaks out against Daniel Pantaleo.




"They've tried every trick in the book to keep the case from going forward. We've all seen Eric being murdered on video," Carr said. "It wasn't just me, it wasn't just an eyewitness. It was all of us who've seen Eric being murdered on camera."


The Civilian Complaint Review Board began its opening statement with Garner's last words stating, "Eric Garner pleads for air and is ignored, instead of giving aid, this officer buries this man's face in the ground, moments later he goes unconscious and minute later he died."

The CCRB made it clear that Garner died as a result of a strictly prohibited chokehold.

Panteleo's attorney says he didn't use a chokehold, but another approved technique called the "seatbelt hold." His attorney argued that, "We know he wasn't choked because he was speaking."

The Police Union is blaming Garner's death on his poor heath.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report)

 

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NYPD Lieutenant Texted 'Not A Big Deal' On The Day Eric Garner Died
BY CINDY RODRIGUEZ, WNYC IN NEWS ON MAY 17, 2019 9:38 AM
audio in link below
http://gothamist.com/2019/05/17/not...Zob69T88O_gOR6Yr0vRtKonEHSEYJpypkdpa9HAQdPU_U
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Eric Garner with his wife, Esaw.


On day four in the disciplinary trial of NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo, text messages between his supervisors on the day Eric Garner died sparked outrage in the trial room.

Pantaleo is accused of using an illegal chokehold while trying to arrest Garner for allegedly selling untaxed cigarettes.

As Garner lay dying on that July day in 2014, Sergeant Dharan Saminath texted his boss, Lt. Christopher Bannon. Saminath had been at the scene of the altercation on Bay Street in the Tompkinsville section of Staten Island.

“Danny [Pantaleo] and Justin went to collar Eric Garner and he resisted,” Saminath wrote. “He went into cardiac arrest and is unconscious. Might be DOA.”

Bannon wrote back, “For the smokes?”

“Yeah they observed him selling,” Saminath texted. “Danny tried to grab him and they both fell down. He’s most likely DOA.”

“Not a big deal. We were affecting a lawful arrest,” Bannon responded.

Prosecutors put the texts on a video screen inside the trial room and Bannon read them out loud. There were gasps in the courtroom, an objection from Pantaleo's lawyer, and an outcry from Garner's family. Administrative Judge Rosemarie Maldonado called for order.

Outside, community activist Loyda Colon, co-director of the Justice Committee, reflected the emotion inside the trial room.

“It's a big deal to his family because Eric Garner's life mattered to his family,” Colon said. “Eric Garner's life matters to us and Eric Garner's life mattered to the millions of people who took to the streets in 2014 demanding justice for Eric Garner.”



Garner’s death sparked massive protests after a viral video showed him gasping for air and repeating the words “I can’t breathe” eleven times. A Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo. Federal prosecutors also convened a grand jury but still haven’t said what the outcome was.

After the uproar, Bannon testified that he wasn’t trying to be malicious and only wanted to ease the mind of the officers involved. Outside the courtroom, Patrick Lynch, the head of the police union, said Bannon knew officers would be worried that they would get blamed.

“What that boss was doing is having everyone take a deep breath, calm down,” he said. “We'll do this step by step.”

Thursday was the first time the public has heard an account of what happened that day from officers who were directly involved. They were called to testify by Pantaleo's attorneys.

Bannon testified that the incident began when he was on his way to a meeting and noticed a group of six men as he drove past Tompkinsville Park.

He was too far away to see who the men were or what they were doing.

But he was on notice from his superiors to do something to address the sale of illegal cigarettes. So he called Saminath and told him to get someone there. Saminath dispatched two plainclothes officers from the 120th precinct. One of them was Daniel Pantaleo, who was finishing up his lunch at the time. No one mentioned Garner by name.

Lynch said the testimony proved that the confrontation wasn't Pantaleo's fault, and that he was following orders.

“The order to go out to enforce those laws came from this building,” Lynch said, standing in front of police headquarters. “Nonetheless, officer Panteleo is the one that’s on trial.”

Under cross examination by prosecutors, Saminath testified that when he arrived at the scene, Garner “appeared not to be conscious.” He said he told Pantaleo's partner, Justin D’Amico, to search Garner. They found cigarettes, and after D’Amico got back to the precinct, he processed the paperwork and the precinct got credit for the arrest. It was unclear whether Garner had already been pronounced dead.

Gwen Carr, Garner's mother said it was business as usual.

“They do not think of us New Yorkers as human beings, especially not the black and the brown,” Garner said. “And this we have to stop because we are all citizens and we are all human beings and we should be treated as such.”

The trial is expected to last through next week. D’Amico, who was Pantaleo’s partner on the day Garner was killed, is expected to testify on Tuesday.

Cindy Rodriguez is an investigative reporter for New York Public Radio. You can follow her on Twitter at @cynrod.
 

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Demonstrators calling for the city to hold NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo accountable for Eric Garner's death were met by police outside of Gracie Mansion Thursday afternoon. Later, some protesters lied in the street chanting "Fire Pantaleo!"
 

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NYPD judge recommends Daniel Pantaleo be fired over Eric Garner’s chokehold death
By Tina Moore and Jorge Fitz-Gibbon

August 2, 2019 | 11:35am | Updated


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Daniel PantaleoAP
Controversial cop Daniel Pantaleo should be fired for the chokehold incident involving Eric Garner, an NYPD judge ruled.

NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Trials Rosemarie Maldonado had been weighing whether Pantaleo, who dodged federal civil rights charges, should face department discipline.

Garner’s July 17, 2014, death on Staten Island became a rallying cry for the Black Lives Matter movement after cellphone video captured Garner, 43, repeatedly yelling, “I can’t breathe!” while being busted on suspicion of illegally selling loose cigarettes.
 

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NYPD judge recommends Daniel Pantaleo be fired over Eric Garner’s chokehold death
By Tina Moore and Jorge Fitz-Gibbon

August 2, 2019 | 11:35am | Updated


Enlarge Image
pantaleo-496.jpg

Daniel PantaleoAP
Controversial cop Daniel Pantaleo should be fired for the chokehold incident involving Eric Garner, an NYPD judge ruled.

NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Trials Rosemarie Maldonado had been weighing whether Pantaleo, who dodged federal civil rights charges, should face department discipline.

Garner’s July 17, 2014, death on Staten Island became a rallying cry for the Black Lives Matter movement after cellphone video captured Garner, 43, repeatedly yelling, “I can’t breathe!” while being busted on suspicion of illegally selling loose cigarettes.

Is he losing his Pension too?
He'll get a private sector job paying 100k by Monday #BankIt #AmeriKKKa
 
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