Daniel Penny Sends a Scathing Message to Leftist City Leaders in Fox News Interview

Daniel ‍Penny, a Marine veteran acquitted in the death of ⁢Jordan⁢ Neely, a mentally‍ disturbed man, ‍spoke to Fox‌ News’ ​Jeanine Pirro following his trial. ‍He faced charges related to Neely’s death during a confrontation on the New york subway in May 2023,but was found⁤ innocent of criminally negligent homicide after the ‍jury deadlocked on a manslaughter charge. In the interview,Penny explained ​he placed Neely ⁣in a chokehold intending to protect fellow passengers‌ from Neely,who⁣ had a history of violent behavior and was threatening ⁣those around him.⁢ Despite facing public scrutiny and potential legal penalties,⁢ Penny expressed⁢ a sense of duty​ to safeguard others, stating he would endure backlash to prevent harm.

Penny ​critiqued New York’s policies, asserting that they have failed to curb crime,​ and suggested ⁤that political motivations led​ to his prosecution. His remarks ‍received meaningful support from ‍viewers on social media, branding him as ​a hero.


A day after being acquitted in a nationally watched trial where he declined to take the stand, Daniel Penny was speaking out.

The Marine veteran, who faced up to 15 years in prison after being charged in the death of a mentally disturbed man during a New York subway confrontation in 2023, sat for an interview with Fox News’ Jeanine Pirro.

And while progressive Democrats like Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg won’t like what he had to say, Penny’s fans are cheering.

Excerpts from the interview are below:

Penny, now 26, was found innocent Monday on a charge of criminally negligent homicide in the death of 30-year-old Jordan Neely in a New York subway in May 2023. On Friday, the judge in the case dismissed a manslaughter charge after the jury announced it was deadlocked on Penny’s guilt.

While Penny did not testify in his own defense, he told Pirro he placed Neely in a chokehold to protect his fellow passengers.

Neely, who had a long history of arrests and violence, and an open warrant for assault at the time of his death, had been ranting and threatening before Penny subdued him, witnesses told police.

“The guilt I would have felt if someone did get hurt, if he did do what he was threatening to do, I would never be able to live with myself,” he told Pirro.

“I’ll take a million court appearances and people calling me names, people hating me, just to keep one of those people from getting hurt or killed,” he said.

The interview drew plenty of praise on social media.

But Penny didn’t place the blame for the confrontation on Neely — at least not in the excerpts that have been aired.

Instead he blamed New York officials who’ve allowed crime in the state to grow — and yet prosecuted him for what he called “political gain.”

“These are their policies — and I don’t mean to get political, I don’t want to make any enemies, really, although I guess I have already — but I mean these are their polices that have clearly not worked,” he told Pirro.

“That the people, the general population, are not in support of, yet their egos are too big just to admit they’re wrong.”

It’s a scathing message, but most Americans probably agree.

And on Monday, a New York jury rendered the opinion that really counts.




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