Eric Garner's Family on $5.9 Million Settlement With New York City: Money Is Not Justice

The relatives of an unarmed black man who died after being put in a white police officer's chokehold said Tuesday that the nearly $6 million settlement they reached with the city wasn't a victory as they continued pressing for federal civil rights charges. 

"The victory will come when we get justice," Eric Garner's mother, Gwen Carr, said a day after the $5.9 million settlement was announced.

"Justice," added one of Garner's children, Emerald Snipes, "is when somebody is held accountable for what they do."

Gwen Carr later joined religious leaders from all over the city in an interfaith prayer service on Staten Island in honor of Garner. She illuminated a candle with the NYPD's Staten Island borough leader in a symbolic gesture of unity. 

The settlement came nearly a year after the 43-year-old Garner died, having repeatedly pleaded "I can't breathe!" as officer Daniel Pantaleo the officer took him to the ground with an arm around his neck. Garner lost consciousness and was pronounced dead later at a hospital.

He had refused to be handcuffed after being stopped on suspicion of selling loose, untaxed cigarettes on a Staten Island street.

The encounter, caught on an onlooker's video, spurred protests. Coupled with other police killings of unarmed black men elsewhere in recent months, Garner's death became a flashpoint in a national debate about relations between police and minority communities.

"'I can't breathe' spurred the national movement," and it won't end "until we change how policing goes," the Rev. Al Sharpton said at a news conference Tuesday with Garner's relatives.

The city medical examiner found the police chokehold contributed to Garner's death. But Pantaleo's lawyer said the officer had used a permissible takedown maneuver known as a seatbelt — not a chokehold, banned under NYPD policy.

A grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo. The U.S. Justice Department and the U.S. attorney's office in Brooklyn are investigating whether there's evidence to warrant charges that the officer deliberately violated Garner's civil rights. Such cases are rare after grand jury inaction or acquittal at state level.

Police Commissioner Bill Bratton declined to comment Tuesday on the Garner case.

The settlement came before any lawsuit was filed, though the family had filed notice of its intention to sue. Comptroller Scott Stringer has made a point of settling some civil rights cases before lawsuits begin, saying resolving them quickly saves the city money on legal fees.

"Following a judicious review of the claim and facts of this case, my office was able to reach a settlement with the estate of Eric Garner that is in the best interests of all parties," Stringer said Monday.

The city did not admit any liability.

Longtime civil rights attorney Jonathan Moore, the family's lawyer, said there also was a settlement with the Richmond University Medical Center whose employees treated Garner. That settlement is confidential.

Mayor de Blasio said he hopes Garner's family "can find some peace and finality" from the settlement. 

Speaking at the church prayer service Tuesday, de Blasio said Garner's death mattered to his family and his community and "came to matter to his city and his nation."

Cardinal Timothy Dolan was among the religious leaders in attendance and said, "I'm afraid we all gasp with Eric as we admit -- we can't breathe." 

Before heading to the service, Dolan and other religious leaders, including Rabbi Joseph Potasnik and the Reverend A.R. Bernard, visited the officers at the 120th Precinct stationhouse to pray for them, too.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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