Jury to hear opening statements in trial of veteran charged in subway chokehold death
NEW YORK (AP) - Opening statements are set for Friday in the manslaughter trial of Daniel Penny, a white Marine veteran accused of choking a distressed Black subway rider to death.
An anonymous Manhattan jury is deciding the manslaughter case surrounding Jordan Neely’s 2023 death, which prosecutors call a reckless killing but Penny claims was self-defense. The case has rattled fault lines surrounding race, homelessness, perceptions of public safety and bystanders’ responsibility.
Penny’s critics see him as a vigilante killer of an unarmed man who was behaving erratically and making dire statements but hadn’t assaulted anyone in the subway car. Supporters credit the 25-year-old Penny with taking action to protect frightened subway riders - action that he has said was meant to defuse, not kill.
Both camps have held demonstrations, and the case was absorbed into the United States’ fractious politics as Republican officials spoke up for Penny and Democratic ones attended Neely’s funeral.