Anonymous wrote:Mentally ill people need to be off the streets and receiving in-patient care (institutionalization) for their own benefit and the benefit of others. It’s shameful that we have people with severe mental health issues wandering the streets unable to care for themselves and threatening harm to others.
Anonymous wrote:Mentally ill people need to be off the streets and receiving in-patient care (institutionalization) for their own benefit and the benefit of others. It’s shameful that we have people with severe mental health issues wandering the streets unable to care for themselves and threatening harm to others.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone seen interview with the jurors? I'm very confused by how this unfolded because I don't understand how they were deadlocked on the higher charge (indicating that at least one person wanted to convict for manslaughter) but then unanimous in finding him not guilty of the lower charge of criminally negligent homicide. That doesn't make sense.
Anonymous wrote:Mentally ill people need to be off the streets and receiving in-patient care (institutionalization) for their own benefit and the benefit of others. It’s shameful that we have people with severe mental health issues wandering the streets unable to care for themselves and threatening harm to others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Vigilante justice cannot be condoned.
That is not what happened here. Self-defense or defense of others is not vigilantism. It is defense.
+1
Penny didn't target Neely. He acted to protect himself and others on an enclosed subway car when a man with serious mental health deficits demanded money and threatened violence. And I believe the killing was an accident -- I don't think Penny wanted to kill someone that day. He wanted to incapacitate someone who posed a threat, and I think in doing so accidentally killed him. He never should have been charged with the higher charge to begin with, and the situation does not really meet the requirements for manslaughter either.
Holding a choke for a minute after someone is unconscious is an accident? Most people would probably say that it's reckless, and that's all they need for a conviction on the manslaughter charge.
Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Vigilante justice cannot be condoned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Vigilante justice cannot be condoned.
That is not what happened here. Self-defense or defense of others is not vigilantism. It is defense.
+1
Penny didn't target Neely. He acted to protect himself and others on an enclosed subway car when a man with serious mental health deficits demanded money and threatened violence. And I believe the killing was an accident -- I don't think Penny wanted to kill someone that day. He wanted to incapacitate someone who posed a threat, and I think in doing so accidentally killed him. He never should have been charged with the higher charge to begin with, and the situation does not really meet the requirements for manslaughter either.
Holding a choke for a minute after someone is unconscious is an accident? Most people would probably say that it's reckless, and that's all they need for a conviction on the manslaughter charge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Vigilante justice cannot be condoned.
That is not what happened here. Self-defense or defense of others is not vigilantism. It is defense.
+1
Penny didn't target Neely. He acted to protect himself and others on an enclosed subway car when a man with serious mental health deficits demanded money and threatened violence. And I believe the killing was an accident -- I don't think Penny wanted to kill someone that day. He wanted to incapacitate someone who posed a threat, and I think in doing so accidentally killed him. He never should have been charged with the higher charge to begin with, and the situation does not really meet the requirements for manslaughter either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Vigilante justice cannot be condoned.
That is not what happened here. Self-defense or defense of others is not vigilantism. It is defense.
Anonymous wrote:Good. He’s a hero who should have never been arrested. I’ve been threatened by homeless people with my young children in tow and it’s scary. Mentally ill people are unpredictable. This situation very easily could have gone the other way resulting in the death of an innocent subway rider. A few weeks ago three people in NYC were stabbed by a homeless man and at least one of them died.