NYPD Arrests Man Who Filmed Video Of Fatal Choke Hold

Gwen Carr hugs Ramsey Orta at the funeral for Carr's son Eric Garner, on Wednesday, July 23, 2014, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Garner died in police custody after an officer placed him in an apparent chokeho... Gwen Carr hugs Ramsey Orta at the funeral for Carr's son Eric Garner, on Wednesday, July 23, 2014, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Garner died in police custody after an officer placed him in an apparent chokehold. Orta shot video of the incident. (AP Photo/New York Daily News, Julia Xanthos, Pool) MORE LESS
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NEW YORK (AP) — The man who recorded video of a fatal police chokehold in New York City has been arrested on gun charges, police said Sunday.

Police said 22-year-old Ramsey Orta was arrested Saturday night on Staten Island, a few blocks from where officers confronted his friend Eric Garner on July 17.

Orta, whose recording of an officer restraining Garner with a chokehold fueled outcry against the police, ischarged with two counts of criminal possession of a weapon.

Police said Orta had a previous weapon conviction that prohibited him from possessing a firearm.

He is due in court this month on robbery charges stemming from a May arrest and an assault charge from an arrest three days before Garner’s death, according to court records.

Orta’s latest arrest came a day after the city’s medical examiner ruled Garner’s death a homicide caused by the officer’s chokehold, as well as the compression of his chest and prone positioning “during physical restraint by police.”

Patrick Lynch, the president of the city’s largest police union, described the encounter between Garner and police as “a tragedy” but said Orta’s arrest “only underscores the dangers that brought police officers to respond to a chronic crime condition” in Staten Island’s Tompkinsville community.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who called Orta to the lectern at Garner’s funeral and said the city should “thank God” he was there to record video “when the police and EMS failed us,” called the arrest irrelevant.

“No one is questioning the validity of the tape, and the medical examiner has validated it,” Sharpton said Sunday.

Police said plainclothes officers from a Staten Island narcotics unit saw Orta stuff a silver-colored, .25-caliber handgun into a 17-year-old female companion’s waistband after they emerged from a brief stop at the Hotel Richmond. Police called the location, on Central Avenue, a “known drug prone location.”

The unloaded semi-automatic weapon recovered was reported stolen in Michigan in 2007, police said. Officerscharged the 17-year-old with criminal possession of a weapon and unlawful possession of marijuana.

Police said Orta was in a hospital Sunday for treatment of a medical condition. No details were available. It was not immediately clear if Orta or the 17-year-old had lawyers.

An attorney representing Orta in the robbery case did not return a telephone message.

Sharpton and Garner’s widow, Esaw Garner, have called for Staten Island prosecutors to charge the officers involved in his death or turn the case over to federal authorities.

The officer who placed Garner in the chokehold was stripped of his gun and badge pending the investigation. Another officer was placed on desk duty.

Two paramedics and two emergency medical technicians were suspended without pay.

Orta echoed the call for arrest in Garner’s death after hearing the medical examiner’s ruling Friday.

“I knew that was the cause because I saw it,” he said. “Now somebody should get charged.”

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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