NYPD Cop Indicted for Manslaughter in Shooting Death of Akai Gurley
Peter Liang reportedly texted his union rep instead of calling for medical assistance after shooting and killing Akai Gurley while patrolling a stairwell.

The district attorney in Brooklyn has secured his fourth indictment against a cop in as many months. Peter Liang of the New York Police Department (NYPD) was indicted on a charge of manslaughter for shooting and killing Akai Gurley in the stairwell of a public housing project in Brooklyn. According to local news reports Liang and his partner weren't sure exactly where the building they were patrolling was, and they had in fact been ordered not to patrol stairwells but to stay on the street, in the courtyards and when in the buildings, in the lobby only.
Liang did not call for medical assistance for at least six and a half minutes after shooting Gurley, opting to text his union representative first instead. The NYPD has maintained from the beginning that the shooting was accidental, and the president of the Sergeants Benevolent Association said the same after news of the indictment broke. "It's a tragic, tragic, tragic case," Ed Mullins said. "I'm sad that he was indicted. I don't know exactly what transpired in that hallway, but I believe it's a truly accidental incident."
Liang remains on the payroll even as he's being arraigned tomorrow. He was placed on "modified duty" after the shooting but until his indictment he was exempt from being investigated by internal affairs.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
derpfeeeeee! Ohhhh derppppppfeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
Liang remains on the payroll even as he's being arraigned tomorrow. He was placed on "modified duty" after the shooting but until his indictment he was exempt from being investigated by internal affairs.
So procedures were followed. Excellent.
How the fuck is he exempt from an IA investigation?
Well, they can't do an IA investigation until the criminal investigation is over. Physically impossible, you know. Law of nature type of deal.
That would be the "Timecop" principle, wouldn't it?
Is that the one where the lead investigator has to kick a pro sports team mascot through a commercial dishwasher?
Dunphy explained it all to me.
You see, the Garrity case means you can't fire a cop for taking the Fifth.
And that means the cop's bosses can't even ask him *questions* about a disputed shooting, because that might put undue pressure on the cop to waive his Fifth Amendment rights and confess.
This is *totally different* from the cops interrogating a "civilian." It's not as if the civilian is being subject to any undue pressure by being put in an interrogation room and having questions thrown at him by uniformed guys with guns.
seems legit
Well of course, what did you expect them to do? Put him in jail, make him come up with bail, make him lose his job, maybe confiscate some of his property, all before he's proven guilty? What kind of barbarian would do that?
What about his pension? Is it okay?
It hyperventilated a bit but was provided taxpayer-funded counseling. It should recover.
Wait, indicted? Of a crime? Is this some sort of joke? Alan Funt, is that you?
Quit living in the past ProLib. The updated reference is Ashton Kutcher.
He, too, is in the past. Everything is in the past. Including this comment.
You're like three time zones ahead of me, so I won't be able to read this comment until it's almost dinner time.
It's already tomorrow here.
PUNK'D
Goddammit. You and Mad TV.
MadTV was everything SNL wishes it could be.
^^this
I miss that show. "Real Motherfuckin' Talk", the UPS Guy....good times.
Yeah, but you can't creative rhyme with Kutcher so easily...
The NYPD has maintained from the beginning that the shooting was accidental,
Which in no way means it wasn't criminal. "Negligent" homicide is still homicide.
The refusal to call for medical assistance for over six minutes? That might well carry some extra weight.
Its all academic, though. We know he'll get off.
Accidental? Unpossible. Law enforcement and gun control experts repeatedly tell us that only trained police and active-duty military can reliably handle firearms without accidental discharges.
Yeah, it really is, but I'm glad that someone from the law enforcement community is coming out to express unequivocally genuine sadness over a death caused by a police officer's misconduct.
Oh. Never mind.
Ed...did they recruit you in a Comp I class?
That young black man was as good as dead, anyway. Somebody was going to shoot him. Its a fact of black life.
There's no point in smearing that fine police officer.
and now, for Best Impression of Bloomberg, I give you, The Late P Brooks!
Hmm. Maybe all those protests did do some good. I guess we need to wait and see how much of a farce the trial is.
An actual indictment. I'm honestly waiting for Dark Helmet to pop out and yell "FOOLED YOU!"
What's all that churning and bubbling? You call that an indictment?
"I don't know exactly what transpired in that hallway, but I believe it's a truly accidental incident."
I'm ignorant of the facts - all I know is that the facts support my political position!
He could be a blogger.
At what point will they start to refer to Liang as 'the White Asian police officer'. Cuz then we will know he's done.
"but I believe it's a truly accidental "
That's what "Criminally negligent manslaughter" is for.
La Wik:
"It is most common in the case of professionals who are grossly negligent in the course of their employment."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manslaughter
What does anyone expect when you have a pro-thug Mayor who fosters an environment that clearly puts cops on the defensive. They are in fear of their lives, their jobs and their pensions. New York you voted this twit in he is your mayor and the crime wave that is soon to follow will be of your own making.