Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Man dies after being placed in headlock on NYC subway

- By Jake Offenhartz and Bobby Caina Calvan

A man who had been shouting at people aboard a New York City subway train died after fellow riders tackled him and one put him in a headlock that lasted until his body went limp, according to police officials and video of the encounter.

Jordan Neely, 30, was yelling and pacing aboard an F train in Manhattan on Monday afternoon, witnesses and police said, when he was restrained by at least three people, including a U.S. Marine veteran who pulled one arm tightly around his neck.

Video of the altercatio­n posted online by a freelance journalist showed the man lying beneath Neely, holding him in a headlock position for several minutes as Neely tried and failed to break free. A second passenger pinned Neely’s arms while a third held down his shoulder.

It was unclear why the group had moved to restrain him.

Neely lost consciousn­ess during the struggle. EMTs and police arrived after the train stopped at a station. Neely was pronounced dead at a Manhattan hospital shortly after. The city’s medical examiner is investigat­ing the cause of death.

The 24-year-old Marine veteran was taken into custody and released without charges. His name has not been released publicly. A spokespers­on for the Manhattan district attorney said an investigat­ion was ongoing.

As news of Neely’s death spread online, some New Yorkers recalled encounteri­ng him during the years he spent performing as a Michael Jackson impersonat­or, often inside the Times Square transit hub.

Video of Monday’s encounter evoked strong reactions from New Yorkers and officials, with some describing the act as a lethal overreacti­on to a person in the throes of mental illness and others defending the Marine veteran’s actions.

A group of protesters gathered Wednesday afternoon in the station where the incident happened to call for an arrest in Neely’s death. Kyle Ishmael, a 38-year-old Harlem resident, said the video of the incident left him feeling “disgusted.”

“I couldn’t believe this was happening on my subway in my city that I grew up in,” he said.

Neely’s death comes amid a period of heightened public attention to both homelessne­ss and mental illness on New York City’s streets and subways. Following several high-profile incidents, including a shooting on a subway train that left 10 people wounded last year, Mayor Eric Adams promised to deploy additional police officers and mental health workers throughout the transit system.

The freelance journalist who recorded the incident, Juan Alberto Vazquez, told the New York Post that Neely was screaming “in an aggressive manner” and complainin­g of hunger and thirst. Neely did not physically attack anyone, Vazquez said, adding that the Marine veteran approached the man after he threw his jacket to the ground.

The video opens with Neely already on the subway car’s floor, with the man’s left arm around Neely’s neck, locked into his other arm positioned against the man’s head. A second man holds Neely’s outstretch­ed arm while pinning the other hand against his body. Neely is mostly still, but half a minute later tries to struggle out of the headlock. Eventually, he goes limp.

Dave Giffen, the executive director at Coalition for the Homeless, blamed city and state officials for an inadequate response to the mental health crisis and questioned why the Marine veteran was not facing criminal charges.

“The fact that someone who took the life of a distressed, mentally-ill human being on a subway could be set free without facing any consequenc­es is shocking,” he said.

 ?? PAUL MARTINKA VIA AP ?? New York police officers respond to the scene where a fight was reported on a subway train in New York on Monday.
PAUL MARTINKA VIA AP New York police officers respond to the scene where a fight was reported on a subway train in New York on Monday.

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