Shocking video shows NYC subway passenger putting unhinged man in deadly chokehold - NEW SAINT FLOYD JUST DROPPED

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Dramatic new video shows a straphanger taking matters into his own hands, pinning down an unhinged man in a deadly incident at a Manhattan subway station this week.

The 24-year-old passenger stepped in after the vagrant, identified by sources as Jordan Neely, 30, began going on an aggressive rant on a northbound F train Monday afternoon, according to police and a witness who took the video.

“He starts to make a speech,” freelance journalist Juan Alberto Vazquez said in Spanish during an interview Tuesday, referring to the disturbed man.

“He started screaming in an aggressive manner,” Vazquez told The Post. “He said he had no food, he had no drink, that he was tired and doesn’t care if he goes to jail. He started screaming all these things, took off his jacket, a black jacket that he had, and threw it on the ground.”

That’s when he said the straphanger came up behind Neely and took him to the ground in a chokehold — keeping him there for some 15 minutes, Vazquez said.

The approximately three minute and a half long video shot by Vazquez shows the blond subway-rider lying on the floor of the train with his arm wrapped around the man’s neck.

The train was stopped, with the doors opened, at the Broadway-Lafayette Street/Bleeker Street station, where Vasquez said the conductor had called 911.

Neely — who was living on the streets and had a history of mental health issues — lost consciousness after being put in the chokehold, and EMS workers at the station were unable to revive him, police and law enforcement sources said.

The straphanger — who sources said is a Marine veteran — was taken into custody and later released without charges. The investigation is ongoing and authorities were waiting on autopsy results before deciding whether to pursue charges against the younger man, sources said.

He declined to comment when reached by The Post Tuesday, saying, “I am not interested in answering any questions, thank you.”

Vazquez, who was on his way to Yonkers at about 2:30 p.m. on Monday, said Neely barged into the train at the Second Avenue station — and quickly began screaming and yelling at riders, prompting many to move away.

Video taken later shows the man flailing his arms and legs in an effort to free himself as the straphanger has him in a headlock and another bystander helps to hold him down on the floor of the subway train.

“He moved his arms but he couldn’t express anything,” Vazquez said of Neely. “All he could do was move arms.

“Then suddenly he just stopped moving,” Vasquez recalled. “He was out of strength.”

A person can be heard in the video expressing worry about Neely’s wellbeing off-camera. The man who had been helping the straphanger hold Neely down replies that, “He’s not squeezing no more.” The two then let Neely go after a few seconds, leaving him lying on his side on the ground.

“None of us who were there thought he was in danger of dying,” Vasquez said. “We thought he just passed out or ran out of air.”

Vazquez said he had mixed feelings about the fatal encounter — particularly since he said Neely had not physically attacked anyone on the train before he was taken down.

“I think that in one sense it’s fine that citizens want to jump in and help. But I think as heroes we have to use moderation,” he said.

“This would never have happened if the police had shown up within five minutes,” he added. “Then we’d be talking about a true hero. It’s complicated.”

 
While I agree with the rest of your comment, I gotta say this bit sounds like an urban legend. They all start with 'a friend of a friend'. Pretty sure nobody is donating to a bum with a card swiper.
Ever since easy card readers became a thing (Square, etc.) this has been happening. Probably for about half a decade at this point. Not an urban legend at all.
 
The thing is, this guy famously tried doing that when no one bothered to help:

View attachment 5116190

The problem is that in current day, no one has the guts to do this in NYC, since we can’t even control our (possibly) illegal surveillance operation that is ran with foreign entities, while actual homicides and burglary get ignored from time to time.
The subway shooter would’ve gotten away with it if he had kept his mouth shut and not bragged about it in police interviews.

Heck with all the stuff people are posting about this crazy guy the marine might be able to as well as long as he remains flat and just says he was trying to prevent someone from getting hurt.
 
Moral of the story: don't intervene if it's not your ass on the line. Let the shitlib do-gooders get dismembered by the feral pets they enable for once.

The dude was literally screaming about how he was gonna kill people. If that doesn't justify an unarmed restraint, then just fuck having laws in this country.

The weekend is coming, as is the 3-year Floydiversary Buckle up.
 
Jews, liberals, Asians, Mexicans and other latin American mestizo breeds, homosexuals, troons and feminists(and their enablers).

The country, really the west itself won't ever be restored or renewed until every street runs red at knee height. Hundreds of millions must perish for the world to be renewed.
chill nigga
 
The :optimistic: take here is that if he hasn't been charged yet, and the usual suspects (mayor and DA) seem to be tiptoeing around the fact they're not charging him might mean he might not be charged.
Of course there's a growing pressure campaign so there might be federal charges later down the line.
 
“Uh he was crazy, but please don’t be racist!”

Reddit at its finest.

I don’t think this will be another Floyd summer. But I could be wrong.
There won't be another Summer of Love because a (D) occupies the White House. The organizing tactics of 'fiery but peaceful protest' are only for when Republicans are in charge or can be blamed.

Letting mentally ill bums have free run of the streets and arteries of public transportation is part of the Anarcho-tyranny imposed against the middle class. The lumpenproletariat are the Hindu cows of the Anarcho-tyrants' worldview: the 'poorer' and more 'mentally ill' you are the more sacred you are (because psychiatry is the real god of Americans now). Disregard that this subway jogger has been arrested over 40 times or that he was threatening people on a crowded train. All of lily white progs will say that 'if he didn't hit you, you should have just ignored him until he decided to hit/stab you' in which case you still wouldn't be justified in choking poor Jordan out because he was 'mentally ill and just needed help' and 'violence/death is never the answer' usually bleated by some Disney-fied sheep who has never had to mix it up with a violent schizo-bum (plenty of those on plebbit).

Can't institutionalize them, can't jail them, can't even police them. This is why I genuinely believe that things have to get worse before they can get better, if they even can. Normies need to understand that 'good intentions' and 'empathy' makes for bad policy.

EDIT:

Here's your average New Yorkers and one of their urban pets in a normal encounter. And the 'empathetic' Progs response to one of their Hindu cows being slaughtered is why you get videos like this.
 
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Apparently the Daily Mail released the strangler’s name.

I imagine the drums will beat louder now for him to be railroaded.
Yeah his real name is Ethan Thomas and he used to work for the FBI.
ethan thomas.jpg
 
Jews, liberals, Asians, Mexicans and other latin American mestizo breeds, homosexuals, troons and feminists(and their enablers).

The country, really the west itself won't ever be restored or renewed until every street runs red at knee height. Hundreds of millions must perish for the world to be renewed.
I hate to break it to you buddy but I doubt anything short of a few billions will do
 
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Gotta love the family coming out and acting all indignant and surprised now. They knew of his mental illness, where were they as he racked up double digits of arrests menacing society? Where were they in the years this spiraled on knowing full well the doctors and judicial system were powerless in keeping him medicated and off the streets? They were living happily unburdened letting him sufffer as a vagrant while the public dealt with the consequences. Maybe they really did try their best but had to cut to ties when it came to the detriment of the family's well being. But you don't get to come out and make pleas for "justice" when you created this problem and let it loose on the world.
 
The (((journalist))) fears the community notes of truth
"Why would people take vigilante action against a common criminal who harassed people daily on their work commutes?!"

I know a bunch of niggers on Twitter are in suburbs and shit and have never been on a public bus or train - But I can say right now that 99% of America who takes the train or bus every single day fantasize about doing what this white kid did to this uppity skitzo nigger to their local problems.
 
Maybe its because I grew up in a majority Mexican town, on the first generation immigrant side of the tracks, but I don't mind Hispanics, personally, and actually think they'd make a good addition. Hard working, much more socially conservative than white liberals, more religious, they've got a machismo culture... they're alright. Kind of like brown Scots-Irish.

The rest, I'm right there with you.


i will go further than that.. if i could swap every nog out for a mexican i would do it faster than you could sing the words to funkytown!
 
Making People Uncomfortable Can Now Get You Killed (Archive Link)
An opinion piece in the New York Times by Roxanne Gay (hehe)

Increasingly, it is not safe to be in public, to be human, to be fallible. I’m not quoting breathless journalism about rising crime or conservative talking points about America falling into ruin. The ruin I’m thinking of isn’t in San Francisco or Chicago or at the southern border. The ruin is woven into the fabric of America. It’s seeping into all of us. All across the country, supposedly good, upstanding citizens are often fatally enforcing ever-changing, arbitrary and personal norms for how we conduct ourselves.
In Kansas City, Mo., Ralph Yarl, a 16-year-old Black boy, rang the wrong doorbell. He was trying to pick up his younger brothers and was simply on the wrong street, Northeast 115th Street instead of Northeast 115th Terrace, a harmless mistake. Andrew Lester, 84 and white, shot him twice and said, according to Ralph, “Don’t come around here.” Bleeding and injured, Ralph went to three different houses, according to a family member, before those good neighbors in a good, middle-class neighborhood helped him.
In upstate New York, a 20-year-old woman, Kaylin Gillis, was looking for a friend’s house in a rural area. The driver of the car she was in turned into a driveway and the homeowner, Kevin Monahan, 65, is accused of firing twice at the car and killing Ms. Gillis.
In Illinois, William Martys was using a leaf blower in his yard. A neighbor, Ettore Lacchei, allegedly started an argument with Mr. Martys and, police say, killed him.

Two cheerleaders were shot in a Texas parking lot after one, Heather Roth, got into the wrong car. One of her teammates, Payton Washington, was also shot. Both girls survived, with injuries.
In Cleveland, Texas, a father asked his neighbor Francisco Oropesa to stop shooting his gun on his porch because his baby was trying to sleep. Mr. Oropesa walked over to the father’s house and has been charged with killing five people, including an 8-year-old boy, with an AR-15-style rifle. Two of the slain adults were found covering children, who survived.
At a Walgreens in Nashville, Mitarius Boyd suspected that Travonsha Ferguson, who was seven months pregnant, was shoplifting. Instead of calling the police, he followed Ms. Ferguson and her friend into the parking lot and, after one of the women sprayed mace in his face, according to Mr. Boyd, began firing. Ms. Ferguson was rushed to the hospital, where she had an emergency C-section and her baby was born two months early.

And sometimes there is no gun. On Monday, Jordan Neely, a Michael Jackson impersonator experiencing homelessness, was yelling and, according to some riders, acting aggressively on an F train in New York City. “I don’t have food, I don’t have a drink, I’m fed up,” Neely cried out. “I don’t mind going to jail and getting life in prison. I’m ready to die.” Was he making people uncomfortable? I’m sure he was. But his were the words of a man in pain. He did not physically harm anyone. And the consequence for causing discomfort isn’t death unless, of course, it is. A former marine held Mr. Neely in a chokehold for several minutes, killing the man. News reports keep saying Mr. Neely died, which is a passive thing. We die of old age. We die in a car accident. We die from disease. When someone holds us in a chokehold for several minutes, something far worse has occurred.
A man actively brought about Mr. Neely’s death. No one appears to have intervened during those minutes to help Mr. Neely, though two men apparently tried to help the former marine. Did anyone ask the former marine to release Mr. Neely from his chokehold? The people in that subway car prioritized their own discomfort and anxiety over Mr. Neely’s distress. All of the people in that subway car on May 1 will have to live with their apparent inaction and indifference. Now that it’s too late, there are haunting, heartbreaking images of Mr. Neely, helpless and pinned, still being choked. How does something like this happen? How does this senseless, avoidable violence happen? Truly, how? We all need to ask ourselves that question until we come up with an acceptable answer.

In the immediate aftermath, the New York City mayor, Eric Adams, couldn’t set politics aside and acknowledge how horrific Mr. Neely’s death was. Mr. Adams said: “Any loss of life is tragic. There’s a lot we don’t know about what happened here.” His was a bland and impotent statement, even though the sequence of events seems pretty clear and was corroborated by video, photography and a witness. And while any loss is in fact tragic, this specific loss, the death of Jordan Neely, was barely addressed. Mr. Adams didn’t bother to say Mr. Neely’s name and went on to equivocate about his administration’s investments in mental health, a strange claim to make while allowing first responders in New York City to involuntarily commit people experiencing mental health crises.
Each of these innocent people who lost their lives was in the wrong place at the wrong time. In most cases, armed assailants deputized themselves to stand their ground or enforce justice for a petty crime. Some claimed self-defense, said they were afraid, though some of their victims were unarmed women and children. We have to ask the uncomfortable question. Why are men so afraid? Why are they so fragile that they shoot or harm first and ask questions later? Why do they believe death or injury is an appropriate response to human fallibility? Public life shared with terrified and/or entitled and/or angry and/or disaffected men is untenable.
We are at something of an impasse. The list of things that can get you killed in public is expanding every single day. Whether it’s mass shootings or police brutality or random acts of violence, it only takes running into one scared man to have the worst and likely last day of your life. We can’t even agree on right and wrong anymore. Instead of addressing actual problems, like homelessness and displacement, lack of physical and mental health care, food scarcity, poverty, lax gun laws and more, we bury our heads in the sand. Only when this unchecked violence comes to our doorstep do we maybe care enough to try to effect change.
There is no patience for simple mistakes or room for addressing how bigotry colors even the most innocuous interactions. There is no regard for due process. People who deem themselves judge, jury and executioner walk among us, and we have no real way of knowing when they will turn on us.
I will be thinking about Jordan Neely in particular for a long time. I will be thinking about who gets to stand his ground, who doesn’t, and how, all too often, it’s people in the latter group who are buried beneath that ground by those who refuse to cede dominion over it. Every single day there are news stories that are individually devastating and collectively an unequivocal condemnation of what we are becoming: a people without empathy, without any respect for the sanctity of life unless it’s our own.

It’s easy, on social media, to say, “I would have done something to help Mr. Neely.” It’s easy to imagine we would have called for help, offered him some food or money, extended him the grace and empathy we all deserve.
It’s so very easy to think we are good, empathetic people. But time and time again, people like us, who think so highly of themselves, have the opportunity to stand up and do the right thing, and they don’t. What on earth makes us think that, when the time comes, we will be any different?
 
You can really tell who has and who hasn't had to deal with the crazy homeless dudes.
The smart ones.
I don’t live in the city, but over here, it gives me a chuckle that they’re trying to turn this into another George Floyd situation. Most NYC natives that use the subway despise homeless people that sleep half naked on the seats, and they don’t even like the smell that emanates from them during afternoon rides.

As someone that used to use the Subway, I’m just shocked that this became a national news story, yet the person from Brooklyn that committed a mass shooting on the subway that didn’t kill people only lasted for a few days and completely forgotten.

Either way, don’t compare this to Floyd. New Yorkers are dumb and mostly filled with city slickers, but not all of us are that dumb enough to side with actual dangerous homeless people that can be unhinged when questioned why they are still on the street in the first place.
This is the greatest strength when/if this goes to a jury. Defense can very easily cite that defendant feared for his life referencing the increase of violence related to subways. It persuasive in the emotional sense, provided the jury are capable of empathy, and factual sense with numerous recent examples of incidents. It would be the best way to do it.

Side note, New York residents, how about trying a different approach? Here me out, all the doo gooders want you to not do anything so don't. Instead start a non profit charity whose only purpose is to give opioids out for free. They started the fire, just add fuel to it to make it burn faster. lol
 
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One thing these fags defending the crazy man refuse to recognize is when they show those Michael Jackson videos, we see the subway is relatively normal and safe. People are just watching their phones or sitting without tensing up. And that makes you realize it was a decade ago. We know the trains a shit now like the video up above where crazy black man grabs womans hair and nothing is done because equity.
 
Ever since easy card readers became a thing (Square, etc.) this has been happening. Probably for about half a decade at this point. Not an urban legend at all.

Immediately after I posted, I did wonder if he was talking abouit a Square reader -- which I can see might be feasible. It seems like it'd be counterproductive though. Anyone who has their begging game sufficiently organized to have a square reader on their phone is almost certainly a pro and wouldn't be getting my money. Most of the beggars that I know don't even have any credit on their phone, never mind a fucking card reader.
 
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