Photo Credit: NNPA

By Stacy M. Brown

Originally appeared in NNPA

New York City grand jurors handed down an indictment on Wednesday, charging Daniel Penny, a 24-year-old Marine veteran, with second-degree manslaughter in the death of fellow subway rider Jordan Neely.
The incident last month has become a contentious issue, stirring discussions on mental health, crime, and race.
Penny and Neely were riding an F train in Manhattan when Neely allegedly began engaging in what witness Juan Alberto described as โ€œsomewhat aggressive speech.โ€
Neely reportedly expressed being hungry, thirsty, and indifferent toward the consequences of his actions.
A bystander captured part of the confrontation on video, which showed Penny restraining Neely in a chokehold on the trainโ€™s floor for several minutes.
First responders reached Neely at the Broadway-Lafayette Street/Bleecker Street Station, where he was unconscious.
Despite their efforts, he was pronounced dead at a hospital.
The incident sparked outrage against Penny and sympathy for the ex-Marine.
The cityโ€™s medical examiner ruled Neelyโ€™s cause of death as โ€œcompression of the neck (chokehold),โ€ classifying it as a homicide.
According to his family, Neely, who often performed as Michael Jackson, had a history of struggling with mental health.
They revealed that he had faced challenges since his mother was murdered in 2007.
In a videotaped statement, Penny, who is white, asserted that he acted to protect himself and fellow passengers during the confrontation with Neely.
He denied that race motivated his actions.
โ€œI didnโ€™t see a Black man threatening passengers. I saw a man threatening passengers, he insisted.
The incident has evoked memories of the 1984 shooting of four Black teenagers on a New York City subway by Bernhard Goetz, a white man who believed he was being mugged.
Goetz, referred to as โ€œThe Subway Vigilante,โ€ was acquitted of attempted murder and assault but was convicted on a weapons charge, resulting in an eight-month prison sentence.
Penny and Neelyโ€™s case has reignited debates surrounding mental health, crime, and race in New York City.
It serves as a reminder of the complex issues facing the cityโ€™s public transportation system and the challenges in ensuring the safety and well-being of passengers.