#Subway Killing Sparks Public Outcry Over Treatment of Homeless New Yorkers #Usa #Miami #Nyc #Houston #Uk #Es

#Subway Killing Sparks Public Outcry Over Treatment of Homeless New Yorkers #Usa #Miami #Nyc #Houston #Uk #Es

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Protestors crowded the F train station Wednesday in response to the chokehold death of Jordan Neely, chanting “Housing, not cops,” and “Homeless lives matter” alongside repeated calls for justice.

Jeanmarie Evelly

A man lights a candle at the Broadway/Lafayette subway station at a vigil for Jordan Neely.

Protestors packed the platform at Manhattan’s Broadway/Lafayette station Wednesday afternoon, decrying the death of a 30-year-old man who died two days earlier after a being put in a chokehold by another subway passenger, an incident that was at least partially captured on video and shared widely on social media.

The New York Times identified the deceased as Jordan Neely, who was known for performing as a Michael Jackson impersonator in subway stations and had been homeless for the last several years, according to the paper.

Outrage mounted Wednesday over the incident, as did calls for police to arrest the man who held Neely down, who officials have yet to publicly name (witnesses told the Times that the unidentified rider initiated the chokehold after Neely acted “erratically” and screamed on the train). No one was in custody as of Wednesday afternoon, but the investigation is ongoing, an NYPD spokeswoman said.

The Manhattan District Attorney’s office confirmed it’s also investigating the incident. “This is a solemn and serious matter that ended in the tragic loss of Jordan Neely’s life,” a spokesperson for DA Alvin Bragg said in a statement.

“I haven’t eaten—it made me sick,” activist Milton Perez, who attended the protest, said of his reaction when he heard the news of Neely’s death.

Perez is member and leader of the Homeless Union at the advocacy group Vocal NY, which in a statement Wednesday attributed the killing to “systemic abandonment and dehumanization of people experiencing homelessness and mental health complexities, fueled by press coverage that clearly influences policies and emboldens vigilantes.”

“It’s been a long time with this rhetoric—blaming homeless people or people with mental health [disorders] for everything,” Perez said.





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