Attorney General Overrules Civil Rights Division To Protect White Cop

Justice Department will not bring charges against the police who murdered Eric Garner.

In totally unsurprising news, Attorney General and Trump Bather William Barr declined to bring charges against Daniel Pantaleo, the NYPD officer who choked Eric Garner to death in broad daylight.

To come to this conclusion, Barr had to overrule the recommendation of the Civil Rights division at the Department of Justice, according to two DOJ officials.

Again, none of this is actually surprising. America is a racist country and, within her borders, it is more or less legal for cops to murder black people, so long as that murder is not somewhat obviously premeditated. The prosecutors that Barr went with said that they couldn’t prove the case that Officer Pantaleo “willfully” intended to choke the life out of Garner. Even though Pantaleo placed Garner in an illegal choke-hold, a move banned SINCE 1993 precisely because it leads to death.

Saying you can’t prove an officer strangled another man on purpose even when you have video showing the officer using an illegal strangulation move is like saying you can’t prove gravity exists as you throw black people off a plane, because you can’t see them hit the ground.

But Barr angering his white supremacist president and his white supremacist supporters by prosecuting an officer who merely killed a nonwhite person was never going to happen. Barr can’t even stand up for the rule of law when the Supreme Court orders him to. There was no chance he was going to seek justice on behalf of a black person in America.

In related news, James Alex Fields, the man who killed white woman Heather Hyer, was sentenced to a second life sentence in Virginia today. The judge called Fields’s actions, “an act of terror.”

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NYPD officer in Eric Garner’s chokehold death won’t face federal charges [NBC News]


Elie Mystal is the Executive Editor of Above the Law and a contributor at The Nation. He can be reached @ElieNYC on Twitter, or at elie@abovethelaw.com. He will resist.

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