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Eric Garner’s Death Will Not Lead to Federal Charges for N.Y.P.D. Officer

Five years after Mr. Garner’s dying words, “I can’t breathe,” became a rallying cry, Attorney General William P. Barr ordered the case be dropped.

Gwen Carr, Eric Garner’s mother, spoke at a press conference on Tuesday after the Justice Department declined to pursue federal charges against a New York City police officer in his 2014 death.Credit...Demetrius Freeman for The New York Times

[For more about police violence and unrest, go here]

A contentious, yearslong debate inside the Justice Department over whether to bring federal civil rights charges against an officer in the death of Eric Garner ended on Tuesday after Attorney General William P. Barr ordered that the case be dropped.

The United States attorney in Brooklyn, Richard P. Donoghue, announced the decision one day before the fifth anniversary of Mr. Garner’s death at the hands of police officers on Staten Island.

[Update: Mayor Bill de Blasio under pressure to fire officer in Eric Garner case.]

The case had sharply divided federal officials and prompted national protests over excessive force by the police.

Bystanders filmed the arrest on their cellphones, recording Mr. Garner as he gasped “I can’t breathe,” and his death was one of several fatal encounters between black people and the police that catalyzed the national Black Lives Matter movement.

His dying words became a rallying cry for demonstrations that led to changes in policing practices across the United States.

Still, a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who was captured on a video wrapping his arm around Mr. Garner’s neck. The federal civil rights investigation dragged on for five years amid internal disputes in the Justice Department, under both President Barack Obama and President Trump.

In the end, Mr. Barr made the call not to seek a civil rights indictment against Officer Pantaleo, just before a deadline for filing some charges expired.

His intervention settled the disagreement between prosecutors in the civil rights division, which has pushed for an indictment, and Brooklyn prosecutors, who never believed the department could win such a case.

The Daily Poster

Listen to ‘The Daily’: A Decision in the Eric Garner Case

Five years after Mr. Garner’s dying words, “I can’t breathe,” became a rallying cry, the Justice Department said it would not pursue charges against a New York City police officer.
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Listen to ‘The Daily’: A Decision in the Eric Garner Case

Hosted by Michael Barbaro, produced by Michael Simon Johnson and Eric Krupke, with help from Jessica Cheung, and edited by Lisa Tobin and Marc Georges

Five years after Mr. Garner’s dying words, “I can’t breathe,” became a rallying cry, the Justice Department said it would not pursue charges against a New York City police officer.

michael barbaro

From The New York Times, I’m Michael Barbaro. This is “The Daily.”

Today: The Justice Department will not bring federal charges against the officer involved in the death of Eric Garner. Ashley Southall on why that decision was reached five years after “I can’t breathe” became a national rallying cry.

It’s Wednesday, July 17.

Ashley, tell me what happened on Tuesday.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

Good morning. Thank you for coming today.

ashley southall

So the United States attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Richard Donoghue, whose office is based in Brooklyn, but also oversees Staten Island, came out and said —

archived recording (richard donoghue)

Before I continue, let me say, as clearly and unequivocally as I can, that Mr. Garner’s death was a tragedy. For anyone to die under circumstances like these is a tremendous loss.

ashley southall

They’ve done an exhaustive review. They’ve looked at every piece of evidence, but —

archived recording (richard donoghue)

But these unassailable facts are separate and distinct from whether a federal crime has been committed. And the evidence here does not support charging police officer Daniel Pantaleo or any other officer with a federal criminal civil rights violation.

ashley southall

— that they would not bring charges against any of the officers involved in Eric Garner’s death on July 17, 2014.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

We know and understand that some will be disappointed by this decision, but it is the conclusion that is compelled by the evidence and the law.

ashley southall

He’s making this announcement one day before the fifth anniversary of Eric Garner’s death, which is important, because for the charge that they thought was appropriate in this case, they only had five years to decide whether to bring it.

michael barbaro

So this is basically the last possible moment to bring this charge.

ashley southall

Exactly. And at the end of the day, the prevailing consensus was that they could not do that in this case.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

Consequently, the investigation into this incident has been closed.

michael barbaro

And remind us of the details of this case, of what happened to Eric Garner, where this case begins.

ashley southall

The case starts on July 17, 2014 on a hot summer day in Staten Island. The police say that a man by the name of Eric Garner has died during an attempt to arrest him. There’s no mention of any kind of use of force, no mention of a chokehold. And then the next morning, the police and the public wake up to this video.

archived recording (eric garner)

Every time you see me, you want to mess with me. I’m tired of it. This stops today.

archived recording

This guy right here is forcibly trying to lock somebody up for breaking up a fight.

ashley southall

It shows two officers, Justin Damico and Daniel Pantaleo, approach Eric Garner on a street in Tompkinsville. And they accuse him of selling cigarettes. And he says, no, man, I’m not selling anything. I’m just minding my business. Leave me alone.

archived recording (eric garner)

Everybody standing here. They’ll tell you I didn’t do nothing. I did not sell nothing.

ashley southall

This goes on for about 10 minutes.

archived recording (eric garner)

You want to harass me? You want to stop me?

ashley southall

Officer Damico moves in to try to handcuff Eric Garner, and he flails his hands away. Then you have Officer Pantaleo attempt a takedown. They fall back into plate glass.

archived recording

Hold on, hold on.

ashley southall

Mr. Garner’s 400 pounds. Officer Pantaleo is probably another 190, 200. The glass is going to buckle. So then they fall forward onto the sidewalk, and that’s where they get Mr. Garner prone and handcuff him. And other officers have arrived at the scene by then. There are about seven seconds when you see Officer Pantaleo’s arm around Eric Garner’s neck. At some point, he releases, and Mr. Garner is saying —

archived recording (eric garner)

I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe.

ashley southall

I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe. He ultimately says it 11 times.

archived recording

Once again, police beating up on people.

ashley southall

E.M.S. eventually arrives. They don’t have any oxygen.

archived recording (speaker 1)

Look, now, man, they gave this man a seizure.

archived recording (speaker 2)

No, move out the way. No.

archived recording (speaker 3)

It’s my brother. We live here.

ashley southall

And he was later pronounced dead at the hospital.

michael barbaro

What happens in the aftermath of this video being released?

ashley southall

So pretty much right away, there are calls for Officer Pantaleo to be fired and for him and other officers to be criminally charged, both for Eric Garner’s death, but also for the omissions of the use of force from official reports.

michael barbaro

Because until this video is released, the officers involved in the encounter, they haven’t mentioned any of the tactics that they’ve used.

ashley southall

Correct. And then three things happen simultaneously. The police Internal Affairs Bureau begins looking into the incident to see if any protocols were violated. At the same time, the Staten Island district attorney is looking at whether a crime was committed and then begins to present evidence to a grand jury. And at the same time, the feds are also looking in on these investigations, trying to see what evidence there is. But at that moment, they’re not yet investigating, because there’s a local process that has to play out.

michael barbaro

And when you say the feds, you mean the Department of Justice.

ashley southall

The Department of Justice.

michael barbaro

So my sense is that this is all moving as would be expected in a case like this. But what’s different is that a month after this happens, Michael Brown is shot in Ferguson and the issue of how police treat unarmed black Americans becomes a major national issue.

ashley southall

Correct. But it’s an issue that’s been bubbling up for some time. If you will reverse back to 2012, when Ramarley Graham was shot and killed by a New York City police officer, he was unarmed.

archived recording

Officer Richard Haste was indicted for manslaughter, but a judge reluctantly threw out the indictment in May on procedural grounds.

ashley southall

Then, a few weeks later, you have Trayvon Martin, who was killed by a vigilante in Florida.

archived recording

We have just learned that the jury has determined that Zimmerman is not guilty of any crime.

ashley southall

And then you have Eric Garner in July 2014, followed by Michael Brown that August.

archived recording

The conclusion? That police officer Darren Wilson was not guilty of a crime when he shot Michael Brown to death on August 9.

ashley southall

And then you have Akai Gurley and Tamir Rice within days of each other.

archived recording

A grand jury decided not to indict Timothy Loehmann, who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice.

ashley southall

So people are seeing this pattern of unarmed black men and boys, and even some women, being killed by the police and no one being held responsible or accountable for their deaths. And that is the backdrop for the decision by the grand jury in Staten Island in December 2014 that there isn’t enough evidence to prove that Officer Pantaleo committed a crime.

michael barbaro

So like the D.O.J. this week, the investigation by the Staten Island district attorney all the way back in 2014 finds that there’s not sufficient evidence.

ashley southall

Yes. And to the public, that’s infuriating. Because keep in mind that in the months between Eric Garner’s death in July and the grand jury’s decision in December, the public has learned that the medical examiner, who is a pathologist, deemed this a homicide. And they also learned that, for at least 20 years, chokeholds have been explicitly banned by the police department. And what people saw on that video was an officer using a banned chokehold and Mr. Garner dying.

archived recording

(CHANTING) I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe.

michael barbaro

We’ll be right back.

And what do we know about how this grand jury decided not to press charges in what seemed to so many, from the video, like a clear-cut case?

ashley southall

One thing that the grand jury also heard that the public did not was testimony from Officer Pantaleo about what he intended to do. And he got up there in front of them and said that it was not his intent to use a chokehold. It was not his intent to harm Mr. Garner or to kill him. It was his intent to bring him down and affect an arrest as he had been ordered to do

michael barbaro

And that testimony, it sounds like, becomes important, the question of intent.

ashley southall

Yes, because the standard of proof in a criminal case is that the prosecutor needs to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the officer willfully acted in violation of the law, that it was an officer’s intent and his will to violate the law. And for that grand jury, the decision not to press charges indicates that the evidence didn’t meet that standard.

michael barbaro

And what about the fact that the use of a chokehold had been banned by police, regardless of intent? Didn’t he use an illegal practice? And wasn’t that weighed by the grand jury?

ashley southall

What Officer Pantaleo told the Internal Affairs Bureau, and later the grand jury, was that he wasn’t intending to use a chokehold. He said he was trying to use a seat-belt technique, which is a tactic approved by the N.Y.P.D. and taught at the Police Academy.

michael barbaro

It’s another kind of restraint?

ashley southall

Yes. And what his lawyers have also pointed out is that, whether it was a seat belt or a chokehold, once they’re on the ground and Mr. Garner begins to grunt and say, “I can’t breathe,” he releases him.

michael barbaro

So after the district attorney decides not to press charges, what happens to the case of Eric Garner?

ashley southall

So you’ll remember that this whole time, the Department of Justice has been watching the investigation play out. And once the local investigation is done, it’s now in their territory.

archived recording (eric holder)

Good evening. I want to provide an update regarding the case involving Eric Garner.

michael barbaro

And when the Department of Justice steps in, Ashley, what are they looking at? Is it a new question or are they basically investigating the same things as the city?

ashley southall

So what the grand jury in Staten Island was looking at was whether Officer Pantaleo committed a crime.

archived recording (eric holder)

Now that the local investigation has concluded, I’m here to announce that the Justice Department will proceed with a federal civil rights investigation into Mr. Garner’s death.

ashley southall

Here, the federal government is looking at whether his crime was violating Eric Garner’s civil rights.

archived recording (eric holder)

This afternoon, I spoke with the widow of Eric Garner to inform her and her family of our decision to investigate potential federal civil rights violations.

ashley southall

And in this case, there were two key things that they wanted to establish, or that they’d felt they needed to establish. One, that the force Officer Pantaleo used to subdue Mr. Garner was objectively unreasonable, that a police officer acting in those circumstances could have recognized what he did as just too much. And then the second thing that they wanted to establish was that his conduct was a willful violation of the law, that he knew the law and that he acted in a way that disregarded it.

michael barbaro

And by those measures, did the Department of Justice feel that it had a strong case to bring against this officer?

ashley southall

So this is the question that they were asking themselves over the more than four years that they were investigating this incident. And there was a lot of disagreement between mostly civil rights prosecutors in Washington, who thought that they should bring charges and thought that there was enough evidence there, and then the prosecutors in Brooklyn, who were going to be the ones who had to prosecute the case, who thought that it was not winnable.

michael barbaro

And what’s your understanding of why those two sides disagreed? What was Washington thinking? And what was New York thinking?

ashley southall

From what we know, it really came down to the willfulness. On the video, some prosecutors thought that the fact that Officer Pantaleo kept his arm around Eric Garner’s neck even after they were on the ground showed that he willfully disregarded the law. In Brooklyn, they were not so sure. And part of that, you can imagine, is from Officer Pantaleo’s testimony that his intent was not to hurt him. His intent was to arrest him.

So all the while that prosecutors are conducting their investigation and dealing with these questions about whether they have a case and whether they can win it, the White House changes hands from President Obama to President Trump. We go through a series of attorneys general — Eric Holder, Loretta Lynch, Jeff Sessions, who are all overseeing this case from Washington. And then you end up with Bill Barr, our current attorney general.

michael barbaro

And the decision ultimately —

ashley southall

Who ultimately makes the decision himself.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

In order for a federal criminal civil rights charge to be brought, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that an officer willfully used more force than he reasonably could have believed was necessary under the circumstances. And the law recognizes that police are often forced to make split-second judgments in circumstances that are tense, uncertain and rapidly evolving.

ashley southall

So one of the main questions of this case is whether or not Officer Pantaleo actually used a chokehold.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

As Mr. Garner and Officer Pantaleo struggled, Officer Pantaleo held onto Mr. Garner and both men fell backward. In the process, Officer Pantaleo’s body slammed against a store window, causing the window to buckle.

ashley southall

And in this explanation, Mr. Donoghue said, yes, he did.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

It appears that in response to that collision and to maintain a hold on Mr. Garner, Officer Pantaleo wrapped his left arm around Mr. Garner’s neck, resulting in what was, in effect, a chokehold.

ashley southall

But here’s how prosecutors dealt with that question.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

Like many of you, I have watched that video many times. And each time I’ve watched it, I’m left with the same reaction.

ashley southall

There is an emotional side that looks at that tape and says —

archived recording (richard donoghue)

That the death of Eric Garner was a tragedy.

ashley southall

That’s a tragedy.

archived recording (richard donoghue)

The job of a federal prosecutor, however —

ashley southall

But then —

archived recording (richard donoghue)

— is not to let our emotions dictate our decisions. Our job is to review the evidence gathered during the investigation, like the video, to assess whether we can prove that a federal crime was committed. At the end of the day, however, the video and the other evidence gathered in the investigation does not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Officer Pantaleo acted willfully in violation of federal law.

ashley southall

What you see on video is very clearly an escalation by the officers to make this arrest for this very minor offense. And it ends with Mr. Garner dying. And so the net effect is that Mr. Garner’s punishment for allegedly selling cigarettes that day is death. That, in many people’s eyes, is too much. But in the eyes of the law, the prosecutors here, based not just on the video, but on the testimony of witnesses and the testimony of the officers, thought there just wasn’t enough.

michael barbaro

So Ashley, it’s been five years to the day that Eric Garner died during this interaction with the N.Y.P.D. And it now seems like prosecutors seem to have closed the book on this case. What, if anything, happens now? Is this case over?

ashley southall

Throughout these five years, Officer Pantaleo has been in a desk job without his gun or his badge. He hasn’t been out on patrol. And —

michael barbaro

He remains on the force.

ashley southall

Yes. There’s this process underway in the N.Y.P.D. that will ultimately end with the police commissioner, James O’Neill, deciding whether or not he gets to stay on the force as a police officer or if he has to leave. And he could allow him to resign. He could fire him. Or he could just dock him some vacation days. That decision could take weeks, it could take months, or it could happen tomorrow. We don’t know. But it’s not over for him.

michael barbaro

So what happens to him may end up being the accountability. It’s not going to happen in a courtroom, it seems. It’s not going to happen at the federal court level or the district attorney level, but it might happen inside the N.Y.P.D.

ashley southall

The Garner family has demanded for the last five years that Officer Pantaleo be fired. They have also asked for the other officers who were involved in his death and those who filed official reports that didn’t mention the chokehold, that didn’t mention any uses of force, should also be fired and held accountable.

archived recording (emerald snipes)

I’m going to stand outside and I’m going to scream it. Pantaleo needs to be fired! He needs to be fired! Don’t apologize to me. Fire the officer. Don’t give me your condolences. I heard that five years ago. We want justice, and we want it today.

ashley southall

If that’s what the family wants, they have quite the mountain to climb. Officer Pantaleo is still on the force. Half of the officers’ names the family doesn’t know, because the city has withheld them. But the message from the family of Eric Garner today was loud and clear.

archived recording (gwen carr)

This is what we have to live every day. And you know what? We’re not going to take this sitting down.

archived recording

That’s right.

archived recording (gwen carr)

This is not going down like this, because if it was one of their loved ones, it would have never went this far. So my son’s death is not going in vain. We’re going to fight this to the last straw if I’m the only one out on the street. And I’ve got all of these supporters behind me.

[music]

michael barbaro

Ashley, thank you very much.

ashley southall

Thanks for having me on.

michael barbaro

We’ll be right back.

Here’s what else you need to know today.

archived recording

But you’ve stopped short of calling these comments racist.

archived recording (mitch mcconnell)

Well, the president’s not a racist. The president’s not a racist.

michael barbaro

On Tuesday, top Republicans in Congress rallied to the defense of President Trump, denying that his tweet calling on four Democratic congresswomen to return to the countries from which they came were bigoted and racist.

archived recording

Mr. Leader, were the president’s tweets that said “go back” racist? Yes or no?

archived recording (kevin mccarthy)

No. And I do not —

michael barbaro

On Twitter, the president himself confronted the allegation, writing that, quote, “I don’t have a racist bone in my body.”

archived recording (nancy pelosi)

Every single member of this institution, Democratic and Republican, should join us in condemning the president’s racist tweets.

michael barbaro

Hours later, on the House floor, speaker Nancy Pelosi introduced a resolution condemning Trump’s attacks on Representatives Ayanna Pressley, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

archived recording (nancy pelosi)

To do anything less would be a shocking rejection of our values and a shameful abdication of our oath of office to protect the American people. I urge a unanimous —

michael barbaro

As Pelosi spoke, House Republicans demanded that she retract her description of the president’s comments as racist.

archived recording (doug collins)

I was just going to give the gentle speaker of the House if she would like to rephrase that comment.

archived recording (nancy pelosi)

I have cleared my remarks with the parliamentarian before I read them.

archived recording (doug collins)

I take it — can I ask her words be taken down? I make a point of order — the gentlewoman’s words are unparliamentary and ready to be taken down.

michael barbaro

House Democrats went on to pass the resolution with the support of just four House Republicans.

That’s it for “The Daily.” I’m Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

On Tuesday morning, Mr. Donoghue called Mr. Garner’s death a tragedy, but said “the evidence does not support charging Police Officer Pantaleo with a federal civil rights violation.” He went over the arrest step by step, maintaining the government could not prove Officer Pantaleo willfully used excessive force to violate Mr. Garner’s rights.

The Garner family and its supporters immediately condemned Mr. Barr’s decision, saying the Justice Department had failed them.

Mr. Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, shifted the pressure to Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York, calling on the city to fire Officer Pantaleo and vowing to fight to hold the officers involved in the arrest accountable.

“We’re not going away, so you can forget that,” Ms. Carr said. “New Yorkers need to come out and flood this city tomorrow.”

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‘Evidence Does Not Support’ Charging Officer in Eric Garner’s Death, U.S. Attorney Says

United States Attorney Richard P. Donoghue explained the Department of Justice’s decision not to file federal charges against a New York City police officer in the death of Eric Garner.

Let me say as clearly and unequivocally as I can, that Mr. Garner’s death was a tragedy. For anyone to die under circumstances like these is a tremendous loss. For the family to suffer as this family has for too long, has only compounded the loss. But these unassailable facts are separate and distinct from whether a federal crime has been committed. And the evidence here does not support charging Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo — or any other officer — with a federal criminal civil rights violation.

Video player loading
United States Attorney Richard P. Donoghue explained the Department of Justice’s decision not to file federal charges against a New York City police officer in the death of Eric Garner.CreditCredit...Richard Drew/Associated Press

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who was standing with her, added: “Five years ago, Eric Garner was choked to death; today the federal government choked Lady Justice, and that is why we are outraged.”

At a later rally on the steps of City Hall, a parade of family members, community leaders, local politicians and civil rights lawyers vented their fury at Mr. Barr and other officials.

Stuart London, a lawyer for Officer Pantaleo, said that his client was “gratified” to hear of the Justice Department decision.

Patrick J. Lynch, the president of the Police Benevolent Association, said Officer Pantaleo had been unfairly singled out for blame and was carrying out a superior’s orders.

“Scapegoating a good and honorable officer, who was doing his job in the manner he was taught, will not heal the wounds this case has caused for our entire city,” Mr. Lynch said.

From the start, the Pantaleo investigation sharply divided the Justice Department.

Eric H. Holder Jr., Mr. Obama’s attorney general at the time of Mr. Garner’s death, said that evidence strongly suggested the federal government should bring charges against Officer Pantaleo, even though it was notoriously hard to prosecute police officers for deaths in custody.

The last time the federal government brought a deadly force case against a New York police officer was in 1998, when Officer Francis X. Livoti stood trial on — and was eventually convicted of — civil rights charges in the choking death of a Bronx man named Anthony Baez.

But the prosecutors in the United States attorney’s office in Brooklyn, led by Loretta E. Lynch, did not believe they could win in court and balked at bringing charges.

Once Ms. Lynch succeeded Mr. Holder in April 2015, however, Vanita Gupta, the head of the civil rights division, and her lawyers convinced Ms. Lynch that the officers had very likely violated Mr. Garner’s civil rights.

Ms. Lynch allowed the civil rights division to take a lead role in the case, and the following September the department replaced the F.B.I. agents and prosecutors who had been working on the case with a new team from outside of New York.

The two sides disagreed over whether the widely published video of Mr. Garner’s arrest proved that Officer Pantaleo had acted wrongfully. Prosecutors in Washington D.C. accused their colleagues in Brooklyn of mishandling the investigation.

Image
Eric Garner with his children in an undated family photo.Credit...National Action Network, via Associated Press

The case stalled again after Mr. Trump won the presidential election and appointed Jeff Sessions as his attorney general. Civil rights division prosecutors recommended to the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, that charges be brought, but he declined to move forward.

As the Russia investigation engulfed the Department and Mr. Sessions was fired, the case languished until Mr. Barr took it up.

To the bitter end, prosecutors on both sides of the debate lobbied Mr. Barr in a series of briefings; and Mr. Barr reviewed the video multiple times, officials said.

But it remains unclear if prosecutors interviewed Mr. Pantaleo, which would have helped establish his state of mind and intent when he put Mr. Garner into a hold. When asked whether prosecutors had interviewed the officer, a Justice Department official would say only that the department had access to “statements relevant to that analysis.”

Mr. Barr, in the end, sided with prosecutors in New York.

But it is ultimately up to Commissioner James P. O’Neill, the final arbiter of police discipline, to decide whether to fire Officer Pantaleo or punish him in some other way.

However, the commissioner will not make a formal decision until the police administrative judge who oversaw a disciplinary trial that ended in June renders her verdict, a spokesman for the department, Philip T. Walzak, said in a statement.

Image
Credit...Demetrius Freeman for The New York Times

Officer Pantaleo, 34, has been on desk duty without a shield or a gun since Mr. Garner died, a status that has allowed him to accrue pay and pension benefits.

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Democrat of New York, called the Justice Department’s decision an “outrage” and said the Police Department “must make their departmental findings fully transparent to the public and take immediate actions to ensure this officer is no longer on the force.”

Mr. Garner, who was 43, died on a Staten Island sidewalk on July 17, 2014, after Officer Pantaleo wrapped an arm around his neck from behind and took him to the ground. Other officers put their weight on him, compressing his chest against the pavement.

The officers had been ordered to arrest him for selling untaxed cigarettes, and he had resisted. A medical examiner testified at the disciplinary hearing that the pressure on Mr. Garner’s neck and chest set in motion a fatal asthma attack.

Federal prosecutors did a “rigorous analysis” of the event, but in the end they did not believe they had enough evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Officer Pantaleo had committed a crime, a senior Justice Department official said on Tuesday, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he had not been authorized to speak on the record.

To prove criminal conduct, the official said, the government had to convince a jury that in the middle of a dynamic arrest Officer Pantaleo made a clear decision to apply a chokehold, which the Police Department had banned more than two decades ago. It was a burden that prosecutors did not believe they could meet, the official said.

None of the New York officers involved in Mr. Garner’s death have been charged with a crime or disciplined by the Police Department. That fact has enraged the Garner family and various advocacy groups devoted to holding the police accountable for abuses of power.

The state grand jury declined to bring charges against Officer Pantaleo in December 2014, after he testified in his own defense that he did not put Mr. Garner into a chokehold, and that he had feared he would be pushed through a storefront window during the struggle.

Image
Officer Daniel Pantaleo leaving his house on Staten Island in May.Credit...Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Associated Press

The Justice Department said Tuesday that it had weighed four elements in deciding whether to charge Officer Pantaleo, including whether he used unreasonable force, whether he willfully violated the law, whether he acted in his official capacity as a law enforcement professional and whether the other person was injured.

Mr. Donoghue said prosecutors did not believe they could prove he had intentionally used unreasonable force. Even if they could prove the officer had used force that was “objectively unreasonable,” the government would still have to show the officer did so “willfully,” a very high level of intent.

The Brooklyn prosecutors who studied the video of the encounter concluded that Officer Pantaleo did not initially intend to apply a chokehold, and that he eventually did so for seven seconds after the two men crashed to the ground, Mr. Donoghue said.

Mr. Donoghue also said that Officer Pantaleo had released Mr. Garner from the chokehold before the dying man said “I can’t breathe,” and neither Officer Pantaleo nor the other officers subduing him applied a chokehold after that point. In the end, he said, the video “does not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Pantaleo acted willfully.”

Reporting was contributed by Ashley Southall, William K. Rashbaum, John Surico and Derek Norman.

Katie Benner covers the Justice Department. She was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for public service for reporting on workplace sexual harassment issues. More about Katie Benner

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: No U.S. Charge Against Officer In Garner Case. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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