NEW YORK — Ten years after Eric Garner 's death at the hands of New York City police officers made ''I can't breathe'' a rallying cry, loved ones on Wednesday remembered his life and legacy.
''I want people to remember him and remember that he was the one that helped get laws changed, that helped implement laws, who was the sacrificial lamb and that, because of him, others have benefited,'' said Gwen Carr, Garner's mother, at the start of a march on Staten Island, the borough where her son died.
A few dozen Garner family members, friends, and activist supporters marched to a park that sits between the sidewalk where he was killed and a street that now bears his name — Eric Garner Way. As thousands of protesters have done over the past decade, they repeated some of his last words: ''I can't breathe.''
Bystander video showed Garner gasping the phrase on July 17, 2014, while locked in a police chokehold. The recording spurred Black Lives Matter protests in New York and across the country. More demonstrations followed weeks later when Michael Brown, an 18-year-old Black man, was fatally shot by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, on Aug. 9, 2014.
Six years later, George Floyd was recorded uttering the exact same words as he begged for air while a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee into Floyd's neck, killing him and sparking a new wave of mass protests.
Carr noted that since her son's death, there has been an increase in the use of video cameras by police. In 2020, New York lawmakers passed the Eric Garner Anti-Chokehold Act, which removed legal ambiguities in official police conduct by creating a felony crime of strangulation by peace officers that causes injury or death. Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who restrained Garner, was fired in 2019, but never charged with a crime.
A decade after Garner's death, Carr remembers his love of Christmas, regrets times she'd yelled at him, and said she has days when she can't find the strength to get out of bed. At the park on Wednesday, Carr and her family — including some of Garner's children — enjoyed a cookout as people from around the neighborhood gathered in a blocked-off street where a basketball hoop was set up by a nonprofit with the help of NYPD officers from the agency's community affairs unit.
Garner died after the 2014 confrontation with Pantaleo and other officers who suspected that he was selling loose, untaxed cigarettes on the street.