Grand jury won't indict NYPD officer in chokehold case
A grand jury voted on Wednesday not to bring criminal charges against a white New York City police officer involved in a fatal encounter with a black man in Staten Island, according to media reports.
Eric Garner, 43, died after being placed in a chokehold by the officer, Daniel Pantaleo, an encounter that was partly captured by a bystander’s cell phone camera. The confrontation took place in mid-July outside a Staten Island beauty supply store where Garner had allegedly been selling loose cigarettes.
The incident — a white police officer involved in the death of an unarmed black man — coincided closely with the case of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Two weeks ago, a grand jury in Ferguson voted not to pursue criminal charges against that officer, Darren Wilson.
Previously: “Post-racial America is bullshit,” Spike Lee
In Ferguson, rioters took to the street the night after the grand jury announcement. While authorities in New York City said they were prepared for demonstrations, Police Commissioner William Bratton said he didn’t expect violence.
“We’ve been preparing in multiple ways for months now, conducting a series of community meetings throughout the city,” he told “CBS This Morning” on Wednesday. “And we’ve been tactically preparing in terms of bringing in resources to deal with any potential eventuality.”
The city also chose this morning to launch a new program outfitting police with body cameras. Bratton tweeted about cops attending a body camera seminar minutes before the grand jury announcement.