Marine veteran Daniel Penny denied he was trying to choke Jordan Neely to death on a New York City subway last month, claiming he was just protecting passengers whom the homeless man was threatening.
NEW YORK CITY (WABC) -- The godfather of the man who died in a chokehold on the subway told Eyewitness News Friday that the death seemed like an injustice, adding that he had questions about the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Marine Corps recruits practice applying the "Figure 4 variation chokehold" — the same grip that killed Jordan Neely — during ...
NEW YORK – The Marine veteran on trial for the subway chokehold death of Jordan Neely called an expert forensic pathologist to the witness stand Thursday, and he came to a dramatically different ...
A forensic pathologist testifying for the defense in the Manhattan subway chokehold trial told the jury that Jordan Neely likely died from a combination of a red blood cell ailment, synthetic ...
NEW YORK -- The Marine veteran charged with choking a homeless man to death on a Manhattan subway has pleaded not guilty to the charges. Daniel Penny was arraigned on the charges of second-degree ...
NEW YORK -- Former U.S. Marine Daniel Penny turned himself in to New York City police on Friday in connection with the chokehold death of Jordan Neely aboard a subway train. Penny, 24, was placed ...
NEW YORK (AP) — In the polarizing wake of Jordan Neely’s chokehold death at the hands of a fellow New York City subway rider, there has been a “distortion of values,” Rev. Al Sharpton said Friday in ...
About twice a week, I commute to USA TODAY’s office in New York City – tap my card to pay the $2.90 subway fare, walk through the turnstile, wait on the platform and ride from my corner of Brooklyn ...
NEW YORK-- CBS News confirmed Wednesday a Manhattan grand jury has indicted Daniel Penny in the death of Jordan Neely. The indictment is still sealed, so we don't yet know what charges the grand jury ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. About twice a week, I commute to USA TODAY’s office in New York City – tap my card to pay the $2.90 subway fare, walk through the ...
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