The Atlantic's Conor Frierdersdorf looks at the historical context behind this police department's unceasing deployment of the lethal restraint.
Even with the NYPD's history of killing people with chokeholds that violate policy, hundreds of non-lethal violations of that policy every year, indisputable video evidence of multiple officers blithely ignoring the fact that a colleague was violating that policy, and their subsequent dishonesty about the chokehold when filing a report on the incident, Police Commissioner Bill Bratton still had the brass to say earlier this year that "he would not support a law to make chokeholds illegal, insisting that a departmental prohibition is enough." He also said, "I think there are more than sufficient protocols in place to address a problem." In context, that's sufficiently absurd to cast a shadow over the man's honor. It's hard to believe it won't come up when New York City is sued for negligence.