An act by a 'Good Samaritan' or a case of 'murder': The rift in how US views subway chokehold death



A former Marine stops a violent homeless man from harassing subway passengers, choking him into submission and drawing accolades for his willingness to step in.

A well-known Black street performer who struggled with mental health and homelessness for years dies at the hands of a white military man in front of horrified onlookers.

Jordan Neely’s May 1 death on a New York City subway train highlights the Grand Canyon-size rift between the left and the right in the U.S. in how we see race relations and social justice amid an ongoing national debate about crime and vigilante justice. It’s a rift that politicians are eager to exploit as part of the 2024 presidential election, experts say.



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