ICharged with strangulation and attempted aggravated strangulation, David Afanador faces up to seven years in prison, the office of the prosecutor of Queens, Melinda Katz, said in a statement.
The arrest, which occurred on Sunday, was filmed by a passer-by with his smartphone, before the police released the images shot by the mini-cameras with which the police are equipped.
We see three individuals, visibly intoxicated, verbally attack the police. After several minutes, one of them seems to grab a can lodged in a trash can.
Four officers threw themselves on him and David Afanador then practiced a strangulation hold lasting more than ten seconds. It seems that the man, who is black, then briefly loses consciousness.
Strangling was already banned by the New York police, but the New York State Parliament and city council have both passed laws in recent weeks making the practice an offense.
Both assemblies echoed the emotion aroused by the death of George Floyd when he was arrested by the Minneapolis police.
The autopsy showed that it was the pressure exerted by the police on George Floyd’s chest and neck that caused his death.
In 2014, Eric Garner, another unarmed black man, died during his arrest in Staten Island, New York, in which another policeman practiced a strangulation hold.
“Even under the most difficult of circumstances, this practice is exactly the type of conduct that the New York police have banned and which the (New York) Parliament has made an offense,” said prosecutor Katz, quoted in the statement. .
Presented to a judge in Queens, who formally served him his indictment, David Afanador was set free.
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