Daniel Penny Declares He Has No Regrets, Says He Would Face Court ‘Million’ Times to Protect Others

Marine veteran Daniel Penny has declared that he stands by the action he took to protect other subway passengers, despite it leading to a very public and highly politicized “manslaughter” trial.

Penny declared that he would face trial over and over again a “million” times in order to protect or save his fellow citizens.

He made the remarks during a new interview with Judge Jeanine Pirro on “The Five.”

Penny revealed his motivations on that fateful day.

He said he intervened to prevent potential harm as he prioritizes the safety of others over his personal comfort with the public and media attention.

Penny added that he would endure a “million court appearances and the hatred and name-calling that comes with them” if it meant preventing even one person from coming to harm.

“This type of this is very uncomfortable,” Penny told Piro.

“All this attention and limelight is very uncomfortable.

“I would prefer without it,” he added.

“I didn’t want any type of attention or praise.. and I still don’t.”

When Pirro asked him what made him choose to get involved, Penny said:

“The guilt I would have felt if someone did get hurt if he did do what he was threatening to do, I would never be able to live with myself.”

Penny also touched on the broader implications of his experience and criticized the policies of liberal city leaders.

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He said he believes soft-on-crime polcies contributed to the subway incident.

“These public officials would do something so self-serving…” he said.

“These political gain, I mean these are their policies and I don’t mean to get political or make enemies, although I guess I have already.”

WATCH:

A Manhattan court found Penny not guilty on Monday after the jury dismissed a charge of second-degree manslaughter last week when they could not reach a unanimous verdict.

Penny subdued 30-year-old Jordan Neely in May 2023 with a chokehold.

He was forced to step in after Neely began exhibiting erratic behavior on a New York City subway, yelling death threats at other passengers.

Law enforcement sources and witnesses on the F train described Neely as yelling and acting unpredictably.

His actions were prompting passengers to feel threatened.

According to prosecutors, Penny maintained the chokehold on Neely for around six minutes.

Penny’s lawyer, attorney Thomas Kenniff, previously said he was confident that a Manhattan jury would focus solely on the facts, not racial issues, despite a recent refusal to dismiss the case.

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