Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Murderer of Eric Garner, Daniel Pantaleo, still free and gets Nazi-Cop 24hr guard to boot!

Good Afternoon from Upper Darby!

In Nazi-America you can kill a Black Person and then become rich and famous, as well as NOT GO TO PRISON. Even when YOUR CRIME IS RULED A CRIME AND HAS VIDEO EVIDENCE TO SHOW YOU COMMITTING THE CRIME. However? This kind of Wheel-n-Deal Justice comes at a price, one that has to ultimately be paid by everyone on all side....

EXCLUSIVE: Smile of the cop who choked Eric Garner. NYPD officer is still under 24-hour guard a year to the day since death which set off race storm

  • Officer Daniel Pantaleo held Eric Garner in a chokehold as he resisted arrest for selling loose cigarettes on street in Staten Island NY
  • Death on 17 July last year set off protests over African-American deaths at hands of police with slogan 'I can't breathe' which Garner was heard saying
  • Pantaelo was cleared of murder by grand jury but is still under internal and federal investigation and working only desk duties for NYPD
  • Exclusive pictures show he is still under 24-hour armed armed protection after receiving death threats 
  • Garner's family received $5.9 million from New York city over his death - but bill for cop's security is estimated at $400,000
The New York City policeman who is under federal investigation for choking Eric Garner to death is still living life under siege - a year on from the killing.
Daniel Pantaleo has a marked police car outside his front door 24 hours a day because he has received death threats.
Pantaleo's blinds are always drawn and he is ferried around by plainclothes detectives in an unmarked police car.
The bill for the security measures is estimated to be as high as $400,000, with both Pantaleo's home and his parents' home under 24-hour protection.
As our exclusive pictures show, he has gained a considerable amount of weight as he is working a desk job rather than being out on the streets.
Guarded: Daniel Pantaleo seen for the first time since since the death of Eric Garner a year ago today. The officer is still on duty but doing desk work and is under 24-hour armed guard 
(Note what it says on the telephone pole)
Pantaleo has also been stripped of his shield and gun while he awaits the completion of two investigations, one from the FBI and the other from NYPD Internal Affairs.
A year ago today Pantaleo, 30, was part of a group of five NYPD officers who stopped Garner, a 300 -pound father of six, for selling loose cigarettes in Staten Island.
The incident was filmed by a member of the public and shows Pantaleo, 30, holding Garner, 43, by the neck in a chokehold as he says: 'I can't breathe' before passing out and dying.
The New York City Medical Examiner ruled that Garner's death was a homicide but a jury in Staten Island decided not to indict Pantaleo.
The City of New York has now settled the case with Garner's family for $5.9 million, but Pantaleo's fate remains in the balance.
He has been made a national pariah and even some of his neighbors do not want him around.
Daily Mail Online has learned that he is living a quiet life that, to the outsider, appears that he is under house arrest.
He rarely ventures out of his house and when he does it is under the watchful gaze of the two officers who are constantly posted outside his home.
He will usually give them a wave as he leaves in his black Infiniti car to visit family members or friends close by.
Pantaleo rarely ventures beyond his neighborhood, and last month he explained why. 
In an affidavit filed in Manhattan Supreme Court he said that he is still getting death threats and had CCTV cameras and a panic button installed inside his home.
In the affidavit he claimed a Michigan man was arrested for allegedly threatening to cut off his head - the man is currently being evaluated by psychiatrists.
Pantaleo could be suspended, fired or given a slap on the wrist - or be completely exonerated.
Garner's death was one of the most high profile incidents where black men were killed by white cops in the past year which have put race relations in America under intense scrutiny.
Among the other cases was that of Michael Brown, the unarmed black teenager who was shot by white officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri, last August.
In Cleveland, Ohio, 12-year-old Tamir Rice was shot dead by a white cop from close range whilst playing with a toy gun in a playground.
 Even though a year has passed, New York has not healed from the scars of Garner's death and the resulting turmoil.
In December last year NYPD officers Rafael Ramos, 40, and Wenjian Liu, 32, were shot dead in their marked patrol car whilst eating lunch in Brooklyn.
The killer, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, 28, wrote on his Instagram account that he acted in revenge for the death of Brown and bragged: 'I'm putting wings on pigs today. They take 1 of ours, let's take 2 of theirs'.
The shooting sparked fears that New York was returning to the bad old days of the 1970s when cops were frequently targets of hit squads.
Following the announcement of the Garner settlement, his family have said that people are wrong to congratulate them.
Garner's mother Gwen Carr, 66, said: 'Don’t congratulate us. This is not a victory. The victory will come when we get justice.'

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