New York Daily News

BREAK FOR COP

Judge’s ruling may help Pantaleo keep job

- BY GRAHAM RAYMAN

A ruling by an NYPD administra­tive judge will make canning the cop who used a fatal chokehold on Eric Garner much more difficult, police union officials said.

Because the Civilian Complaint Review Board didn’t charge Officer Daniel Pantaleo for the Staten Island father’s 2014 death before the statue of limitation­s expired, Judge Rosemarie Maldonado ruled that the cop cannot be tried on lesser charges of violating police guidelines.

Pantaleo had to be charged within 18 months of Garner’s July 17, 2014, death, but the CCRB waited until January — almost five years after the fact.

Now, the CCRB has to show that Pantaleo committed a crime — either assault or strangulat­ion, according to the Police Benevolent Associatio­n.

In December 2014, a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict the officer. A federal investigat­ion into whether Pantaleo violated Garner’s civil rights has dragged on with no action for years.

“All we have asked for in this process is fairness, so we are glad that the judge has rejected CCRB’s attempt to skirt the law,” PBA President Patrick Lynch said. “This case now boils down to a single fact: P.O. Pantaleo did not commit a crime. A grand jury of regular New Yorkers has already reviewed the same evidence and come to that conclusion. This disciplina­ry trial must yield a similar result.”

In a statement, Frederick Davie, CCRB chairman, disputed the union’s claim. “Maldonado properly denied Police Officer Pantaleo’s motion to dismiss the charges against him, as no statute of limitation­s applies in this case,” he said.

Neither the union, the NYPD nor the CCRB provided a copy of the judge’s order - presumably because of the city’s interpreta­tion of state Civil Rights Law section 50-a, which it claims prevents the release of all NYPD disciplina­ry records.

The decision caused a significan­t amount of confusion about the judge’s order.

“We are confident that, once all the evidence has been presented, the police commission­er will find Officer Pantaleo guilty of misconduct and ultimately terminate him from the department,” spokeswoma­n Collen Roache said.

Loyda Colon of Communitie­s United for Police Reform, called the union’s claims misleading.

“Pat Lynch and Daniel Pantaleo’s legal defense team are desperatel­y trying every dirty trick in the book to let Pantaleo avoid any consequenc­es for killing Eric Garner,” Colon said.

Pantaleo initially faced department­al charges of strangulat­ion and attempted reckless assault. A city official said it was necessary to file the patrol guide charges to bring a case in the NYPD trial room, even though they would be dismissed on statute of limitation­s.

The Pantaleo trial is slated to start Monday.

 ??  ?? wen arr cen er , whose son Eric Garner (above) was killed in confrontat­ion with cops, talks to media on Thursday, a day before ruling gave Officer Daniel Pantaleo (above right) a better chance of keeping his job.
wen arr cen er , whose son Eric Garner (above) was killed in confrontat­ion with cops, talks to media on Thursday, a day before ruling gave Officer Daniel Pantaleo (above right) a better chance of keeping his job.

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