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   sci.military.naval      Navies of the world, past, present and f      118,642 messages   

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   Message 117,552 of 118,642   
   Ryan Duchek to All   
   Daniel Penny 'should be celebrated' for    
   13 May 23 08:17:30   
   
   XPost: alt.politics.nationalism.white, nyc.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics   
   From: rduchek@shaw.ca   
      
   Daniel Penny, the Marine who placed Jordan Neely in a fatal chokehold,   
   “should be celebrated” for jumping into action “for the benefit of others”   
   on the crowded Manhattan subway, his lawyer asserted in a new radio   
   interview.   
      
   Thomas Kenniff made the remarks Friday night on WABC’s ‘Cats & Cosby’ show   
   hours after Penny, 24, was arraigned on a charge of second-degree   
   manslaughter.   
      
   “He didn’t enter the subway seeking to harm anyone. He didn’t attack   
   anyone,” Kenniff said of Penny.   
      
   “He was really putting himself in harm’s way for the benefit of others. He   
   shouldn’t be pilloried for that. He should be celebrated,” Kenniff told   
   hosts John Catsimatidis and Rita Cosby.   
      
   Penny placed Neely into a deadly chokehold aboard an uptown F train on May   
   1 after the homeless man was observed “making threats and scaring   
   passengers,” prosecutors said.   
      
   “The reality is that there is not a single living, breathing New Yorker —   
   particularly anyone who rides the subways — who can’t relate to exactly   
   the sort of situation that my client and the other passengers on the train   
   were confronted with,” Kenniff said in Friday’s radio interview.   
      
   “In no way shape or form [did Penny] seek to demean the victim in this   
   case,” he added.   
      
   Kenniff told the hosts his team is conducting a “very active   
   investigation” that he said will absolve Penny of the charges against him.   
      
   “My firm works with all retired NYPD detectives, some of the best the   
   business,” Kenniff said.   
      
   “We’ve uncovered a lot, and I think there’ll be a lot more to come, quite   
   frankly.”   
      
   Penny surrendered to police in Manhattan Friday morning and was arraigned   
   soon after.   
      
   He was released after posting $100,000 bail.   
      
   Neely’s family blasted Manhattan prosecutors for only charging Penny with   
   manslaughter, arguing that the former Marine intentionally killed the   
   homeless man.   
      
   The legal team pushed for a second-degree murder charge — Penny had   
   undergone extensive physical training and knew he was pushing the   
   chokehold maneuver to the fatal limit, they argued.   
      
   “We knew that justice would not be swift. We realized that justice was   
   going to be a journey,” the lawyers said.   
      
   “Today we are not going to stop until we have full justice. We are going   
   to pause to recognize that we have taken the first step, a step in the   
   right direction.”   
      
   Shocking video captured Penny wrapping his arms around the neck of the   
   homeless man — who struggled with mental health issues since his mother’s   
   murder over a decade ago — while other commuters helped to restrain   
   Neely’s flailing limbs.   
      
   The city medical examiner ruled Neely’s death a homicide, noting he died   
   due to “compression of neck (chokehold).”   
      
   In the wake of Neely’s death, debate ensued over whether the tragedy was   
   justified.   
      
   According to witness accounts, Neely was acting erratically and was   
   threatening other passengers before Penny stepped in.   
      
   Neely had a long history of mental illness and had several prior arrests,   
   including one from 2021 when he socked an older woman in the head,   
   severely injuring her and landing himself in jail for more than a year.   
      
   The DA should be jailed for not prosecuting the dead scumbag for previous   
   offenses.   
      
      
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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