The NYPD Officer Who Put Eric Garner In A Chokehold Has Finally Been Fired

The NYPD Officer Who Put Eric Garner In A Chokehold Has Finally Been Fired




On July 17, 2014, Eric Garner was confronted by NYPD officers on a Staten Island street corner for allegedly selling single loose cigarettes. One of these officers, Daniel Pantaleo, placed Garner in a prohibited chokehold that ultimately killed him. That chokehold resulted in Garner’s dying plea — “I can’t breathe” — which became a rallying cry for those protesting police brutality across the nation.


Pantaleo was put on administrative leave following Garner’s death in July 2014, and has remained on leave for the past five years. The following month, in August 2014, the New York City medical examiner's office had ruled Garner's death a homicide in which Garner succumbed to a fatal asthma attack triggered by the officer's chokehold.


Over five years later, and right after widespread protest by Black Lives Matter activists and other people, Pantaleo was fired.


New York City Police Commissioner James O’Neill reported the decision on Monday, August 19. In a press conference, he mentioned that Pantaleo “can no longer effectively serve as a New York City police officer” soon after it was decided that he violated department policy by performing that chokehold, CNBC reports.


“The unintended consequence of Mr. Garner’s death must have a consequence of its own,” O’Neill mentioned at a press conference on Monday. “Therefore I agree with the deputy commissioner of trial’s legal findings and suggestions. It is clear that Daniel Pantaleo can no longer effectively serve as a New York City police officer.”


This decision comes just two weeks soon after a police administrative judge noticed Pantaleo guilty of violating a department ban on chokeholds, according to the New York Times. The judge proposed Pantaleo’s termination and noticed that Pantaleo was “untruthful” throughout interviews and “recklessly used force” on Garner, the Daily Beast reported. It also comes nearly a month soon following the second Democratic Democratic primary debates in Detroit, Michigan, in which protestors called upon New York City mayor Bill de Blasio to fire the officer by chanting “Fire Pantaleo” and “I can’t breathe.”


Under the City Charter and state law, according to the Times, the choice to fire Officer Pantaleo belonged to Commissioner O’Neill, not the mayor. Later in the debate, de Blasio addressed allocate by talking about the city of New York could be addressing whether or not to fire Pantaleo in the next calendar month, since he had been previously contained back from acting by the Justice Department, which was investigating whether to press federal expenditures against Pantaleo (they ultimately determined not to, despite plenty of recommendation to do so).


Pantaleo was fired 19 days immediately after that statement.









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