Daniel Penny was captured in videos recorded by bystanders
putting Neely in a chokehold from behind for several minutes on
May 1, while they rode on a subway train in Manhattan. The
killing gained widespread public attention, with some viewing
Neely, who was Black, as a victim of a vigilante, and others,
including some Republican politicians, treating Penny as a hero.
Penny, who is white, pleaded not guilty later that month to
charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide in the
Manhattan criminal court. He was released from custody on a
$100,000 bond. The most serious charge is a felony that carries
a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.
Judge Maxwell Riley of Manhattan Supreme Court will decide on
the motion to dismiss.
Neely was a 30-year-old former Michael Jackson impersonator who
had struggled with mental illness and had spent time in the
city's strained shelter system. In the minutes before he was
killed, he had been shouting about how hungry he was and that he
was willing to return to jail or die, according to passengers in
the car.
Penny has said he acted to defend himself and other passengers,
and did not intend to kill Neely. His lawyers have argued that
prosecutors did not present sufficient evidence of this to the
grand jury that issued the indictment.
Police questioned Penny on the day Neely died, but he would not
be arrested and make an initial court appearance until 11 days
later.
Witnesses have said Neely did not physically threaten or attack
anyone before Penny grabbed him. His killing renewed debate
about gaps in the city's systems for homeless and mentally ill
New Yorkers.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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