Jordan Neely’s uncle wants a pound of white flesh, says no plea deal for Daniel Penny

Christopher Neely, the uncle of Jordan Neely, the criminal vagrant who died after being placed in a choke hold aboard a New York City subway, wants his pound of flesh — white flesh, in this case.

The uncle spoke with the New York Post and borrowed from the same narrative used against police, that being that Marine Corps veteran Daniel Penny, the white man who restrained Jordan Neely after he was allegedly threatening to kill someone, is essentially going through life in search of opportunities to kill black men.

“He needs to be prosecuted or he will do it again,” Christopher said. “It’s a smack in the face for Jordan’s family and the people of New York.”

Penny broke his silence over the weekend in an exclusive interview with the Post, insisting that race was not a factor in taking action as terrified subway riders feared the worst from a ranting Jordan Neely, who violently attacked an elderly woman at a subway station in 2021 —  the Marine vet was charged with second-degree manslaughter by Soros-backed Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

“This had nothing to do with race,” the soft-spoken 24-year-old said. “I judge a person based on their character. I’m not a white supremacist.”

As one witness recounted, Jordan Neely “went on an explosive tirade just before his caught-on-camera death, telling people he was willing to ‘kill a motherf—er’ and “[take] a bullet” and go to jail.”

Mistaking the truth for arrogance, Christopher Neely wants Penny in front of a New York City jury.

“I want this to go to trial,” he told the Post. “He has too much confidence in himself and has to be taught what he did was wrong.”

While the media is going out of its way to paint Jordan Neely as moonwalking Michael Jackson impersonator, the next George Floyd or Michael Brown, he had been arrested 40 times and had a history of violent behavior. And his uncle was right about one thing:  if Penny was faced with a similar situation where a criminal was threatening to harm people, he would intervene.

“You know, I live an authentic and genuine life,” Penny said when the Post asked if he would take action again in a similar situation. “And I would — if there was a threat and danger in the present …”

“I’m deeply saddened by the loss of life,” he added. “It’s tragic what happened to him. Hopefully, we can change the system that’s so desperately failed us.”

“Us” being the straphangers who are left to fend for themselves on the violent NYC subway system —  from March 2020 until early April, 27 people were murdered in the subway, according to the newspaper.

But Christopher Neely has a different take.

“He thinks what he did was a good deed — that is monstrous,” he said. “How can you say ‘everything I did was right’ when he killed an unarmed man that weighed 100 pounds, if that?”

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Tom Tillison

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