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The release of the records comes on the heels of the New York State legislature repealing a law known as 50-a, which shielded police disciplinary records from being viewed by the public for years.
“I’m so glad for the transparency,” Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, told CNN Tuesday. “I just think going forward we shouldn’t have to fight and wait five years to get the disciplinary records of the police officers who recklessly kill.”
Cellphone video shows Daniel Pantaleo, a White New York Police Department officer, maintaining a chokehold as Garner, who is Black, is taken to the ground in Staten Island, crying out, “I can’t breathe.” Police were trying to arrest Garner, 43, because he was allegedly selling loose cigarettes illegally.
During Pantaleo’s trial his disciplinary records were not allowed to be released publicly due to the shield law. The decision made by an NYPD judge in his trial was also sealed because of the law.
Seventeen complaints were filed
The history of allegations made against Pantaleo was released Friday by New York City’s Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB), an independent oversight agency that reviews complaints against police officers. Seventeen complaints against Pantaleo were filed with the agency from 2009 to 2014, the year Garner was killed. They resulted in eight cases being opened against Pantaleo, which included the case involving Garner’s death. Three of those cases had claims that the CCRB deemed were “substantiated,” including Garner’s.
One case that the CCRB substantiated was from an incident in 2011 where Pantaleo allegedly abused his power when conducting a vehicle stop and search. It resulted in Pantaleo receiving “instructions” as a penalty, according to the disciplinary record.
Another substantiated case against Pantaleo from 2012 alleged that he abused his power when stopping and searching a person. That case resulted in a departmental disciplinary trial where Pantaleo was found guilty and was penalized by having to forfeit two vacation days, according to the disciplinary record.
CNN has reached out to Pantaleo’s attorney for comment on the release of his disciplinary records.
CCRB Chair Fred Davie in a statement to CNN praised grassroots organizations for fighting to change laws to make records like these accessible to the public.
“The Department is making every effort to do this as quickly as possible,” Moroney said in a statement to CNN.
The city delayed holding a disciplinary trial
Carr, who sat through Pantaleo’s disciplinary trial, has long decried the lack of transparency in not being able to see the disciplinary history of any of the police officers who were involved in her son’s death.
“Immediately after my son was murdered we knew none of this about the officer,” Carr said, referring to Pantaleo.
Carr said through the help of police reform advocacy groups she was able to learn about Pantaleo’s history piecemeal, as people who had been allegedly abused by him came forward.
Because of what she slowly learned about Pantaleo’s history, she pushed for a departmental trial for five years, she said. The city delayed holding a disciplinary trial for Pantaleo while waiting for the Justice Department to make a decision on whether it would charge Pantaleo.
Carr was further emboldened to continue pushing for justice for her son after Pantaleo’s disciplinary records were leaked to the progressive news website Think Progress in 2017.
Garner’s last words, “I can’t breathe,” is a phrase that has become a chant protesters use to decry deaths of Black people at the hands of police, including George Floyd, who was seen with a Minneapolis Police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly nine minutes before he died in May. All four former officers involved in Floyd’s killing face charges.
“Even though we change laws we have to heal hearts and change minds in order for this to work,” Carr said. “All the law changing is not going to work unless the superiors hold the officers’ feet to the fire and really enforce these laws.”
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