The Staten Island District Attorney will take the killing of Eric Garner by New York police officers to a grand jury.
Richmond County District Attorney Daniel Donovan said in a statement Tuesday that he will begin presenting evidence to a grand jury next month. “Mindful of the solemn oath to enforce the law that I took when I was first sworn into office as District Attorney in January of 2004, and with a full appreciation that no person is above the law, nor beneath its protection,” Donovan said in a statement. “I assure the public that I am committed to conducting a fair, thorough, and responsible investigation into Mr. Garner’s death, and that I will go wherever the evidence takes me, without fear or favor.”
Garner was killed on July 17, when he collapsed as police officer Daniel Pantaleo used what appeared to be an illegal chokehold to subdue him. In a video taken by a bystander, the 43-year-old complained that he couldn’t breathe as officers swarmed him and brought him to the ground. The New York City medical examiner ruled Garner’s death a homicide, due to compression of the neck.
Police said that they targeted Garner because they suspected him of selling loose cigarettes.
Ramsey Orta, who recorded the video of Garner’s death, was arrested by police and charged with weapons possession the day after the medical examiner’s report was released. Orta’s wife and mother both reported that police had been harassing him in retaliation for filming Garner’s death. Orta’s wife, Chrissie Ortiz, was also arrested on August 6th.
Chokeholds have been banned by the NYPD for 20 years. Yet on July 26, witnesses caught NYPD officers using a chokehold on a pregnant woman they accused of grilling illegally outside her apartment in Brooklyn.









