NYC Cop "Choke Hold" Trial Begins Today Amidst Confusion

Did He Use a Prohibited Choke Hold?; Did It Cause Garner's Death?
 
 
"Choke Hold" Cop May Be Found Not Guilty
"Choke Hold" Cop May Be Found Not Guilty
WASHINGTON - May 13, 2019 - PRLog -- The trial of NYC police officer Daniel Pantaleo, who used a so-called "choke hold" which allegedly caused the death of Eric Garner, begins Monday, after a judge's ruling helped clarify some of the legal confusion involved in the case, but there's still widespread misunderstanding, suggests public interest law professor John Banzhaf.   The judge's ruling, and the defense strategy, follow the same legal analysis Banzhaf published shortly after the incident occurred.

        First, noted Banzhaf, not every violation of a police department rule or policy - e.g. one prohibiting certain choke holds - automatically and necessarily makes an officer guilty of a crime.

        For example, if an officer defending himself from a knife attack used a mace-type chemical repellent other than ones approved by the department, the cop would not be guilty of a crime unless he used more force than reasonably necessary under the circumstances, regardless of departmental regulations.

        That's effectively the law which will be applied on Monday.  As the New York Times put it, "the Police Department judge overseeing the trial said that prosecutors must prove that Officer Pantaleo's actions went beyond a violation of departmental rules and constituted a crime - an unusually high bar."

        Second, there is also confusion regarding what is a "choke hold," and exactly what is prohibited by the applicable NYC police department regulation.

        One type of choke hold, familiar to anyone who has watched Olympic judo, is one designed to render the opponent temporarily unconscious by momentarily cutting off the flow of blood to the brain.  To accomplish this, pressure is applied to the sides of the neck rather than to the front.

        This application, which is fully permitted by the rules of the sport, is very dramatic when used in matches, since the competition ends with one participant unconscious on the mat, only to regain consciousness seconds later.  But this type of vascular choke hold, which cuts off blood flow to the brain, is not the type prohibited by NYC police regulations

         As NPR reported: "What the New York Police Department bans is a hold that cuts off the air - that crushes windpipe in such a way that you can't breathe."

         The New York City Police defines it as "any pressure to the throat or windpipe, which may prevent or hinder breathing or reduce intake of air."

         In this second type of choke hold, pressure is applied directly to the front of the neck -  directly onto the windpipe or trachea - where it cuts off the flow of air, not blood.

        It is particularly dangerous, especially in arrest situations, because it can cause severe damage to the windpipe and cause suffocation.

        This is why many police departments, including New York City's, have banned the windpipe type of choke hold, while at the same time continuing to teach and use other forms.

        In this third version, an officer's forearm is applied to the perpetrator's [hereinafter "perp"] neck, not to cut off blood or air flow, but rather to apply force with maximum leverage or control to bring him to the ground.

        In one version, which is illustrated by many videos available on the Internet, a officer brings one arm over the perp's shoulder and pushes sideways on the neck while the other arm goes under the perp's armpit on the other side so that the officer can then maintain a tight hold by clasping his hands over the perp's chest.

        This for obvious reasons is sometimes called the "seat belt" maneuver or take down, and it is widely taught and practiced by many police departments, apparently including New York City's.

         New York Times reporter Kirk Semple, who participated in a demonstration, noted that "the differences between the legal and illegal [choke holds] seemed obvious in the highly controlled environment of the studio."

        Although there have been many interpretations of the Garner video, there are at least two which would support the officer's version that he did not intentionally use a prohibited choke hold designed to cut off the perp's airway.

        In other words, some would argue that the videotape shows the officer's trying to use this permitted maneuver where the "crook of the arm is in front of the Adam's apple. So the Adam's apple's actually not being pushed in."

        Another interpretation would suggest that the officer begins - and is trying to use - the seat belt take down, but that Garner's huge size makes it impossible for Pantaleo to bring his other arm - the so-called underhook - around Garner's very large chest, so he has to link it over Garner's other shoulder.
http://banzhaf.net/  jbanzhaf3ATgmail.com  @profbanzhaf

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