You're right, the NYPD actually banned all of these holds in 1993: http://www.nytimes.com/1993/11/24/nyreg ... icers.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;buddyhotrod wrote: the Video Does in Fact show a Illegal police choke maneuver being used. I am sorry but the officer broke NYPD policy by choking someone and needs to face the Charges. I have no idea what the Grand Jury was told by the DA. I am for the police 100% but the video speaks volumes along with the fact that NYPD are not allowed to choke any person at all. The Officer clearly broke NYPD policy. beyond a shadow of a doubt.
Even if it was a violation of NYPD policy, that policy is not the law... And thank goodness NYPD doesn't make the law.. The actual "law" and subsequent established case law, such as Graham v. Connor, has granted officers great latitude in the use of force when arresting someone. And what I heard on the air from someone who said he was with NYPD was that when they decide to arrest someone, they don't dilly-dally around or provide a chance to talk about it. That's scary.
This officer was attempting to use non-lethal force to subdue someone. It sounds like he could be disciplined by the department if he violated internal policy on the means of that submission, but it's not "illegal" to use that type of hold while making an arrest.
My understanding is that for the officer to be indited, the DA would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the officer intended to cause death... Could you prove that? I'm pretty sure that I couldn't. I'll wager that the soon-to-be-pending civil case will have a very different result as the bar for success is very different.
Then again, the saying is that DA's can indite "ham sandwiches" if they want to... I don't trust DA prosecutions of police officers - there has to be cooperation in that relationship to begin with and it's not arms-length. We need someone else prosecuting the police, not the people that they work with every day... DA's prosecuting the police is pretty idiotic, actually...
Note, I'm not defending the actions of the officer here, nor do I remotely agree with what happened. I'm explaining why it's going down the way it is...