Daniel Penny, the 24-year-old U.S. Marine veteran facing a New York City manslaughter charge in the chokehold death of Jordan Neely, pleaded not guilty at his Manhattan arraignment Wednesday morning.
The arraignment took only three minutes, with Penny wearing a navy blue suit and pleading not guilty to charges of second-degree manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.
He was granted the same $100,000 bail conditions that previously led to his release from custody.
Neely was a 30-year-old homeless man with a lengthy criminal record, involving assaults on subway riders, and history of mental illness.
DANIEL PENNY: MARINE VET ACCUSED OF FATAL SUBWAY CHOKEHOLD REVEALS WHY HE STEPPED IN
He died after an erratic altercation on an F train subway car during which witnesses say he threatened riders and Penny intervened.
Penny restrained him with a chokehold and dragged him to the floor with the help of another straphanger.
Yet another passenger caught part of the scuffle on video.
“If [Neely] had carried out his threats, he would have killed somebody,” Penny told Fox News Digital in June.
Penny said he was headed to the gym the afternoon of May 1 when an agitated Neely boarded the train around 2:30 p.m. at the Second Avenue station in Manhattan, screaming at passengers and panhandling.
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“I don’t care if I have to kill an F, I will,” Neely ranted, according to another rider. “I’ll go to jail, I’ll take a bullet.”
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His antics left other passengers uncomfortable, and Penny intervened.
“I was scared,” he said in the June interview. “I looked around, and I saw older women and children, and they were terrified.”
Police questioned and released Penny after the incident and did not arrest him until May 12, 11 days later, after mounting public outcry.
He faces charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide and up to 19 years in prison if convicted on both counts.
Neely has been described as a Michael Jackson impersonator – but he also had a violent history, including a 2021 assault on a 67-year-old woman at a subway station.
City authorities knew he suffered from mental illness, according to the New York Post, which shares common ownership with Fox News Digital, and at times came off as suicidal.
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Fox News’ Rebecca Rosenberg and The Associated Press contributed to this report.