Stay Away From the Platform Edge, New York City Subway Chief Urges After Latest Attack in Transit System

Wire Service
By Wire Service
January 25, 2022New York
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Stay Away From the Platform Edge, New York City Subway Chief Urges After Latest Attack in Transit System
Passengers enter a Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) subway in New York on June 29, 2017. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

After yet another person was pushed onto New York City subway tracks over the weekend, the head of the city’s transit agency is urging people to stay away from the edge of platforms across a sprawling system where the mayor has acknowledged people do not feel safe as crime rises citywide.

The Metropolitan Transit Authority also is looking at making changes to subway platforms, MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber told WABC on Sunday.

“These incidents are unacceptable and have to stop,” Lieber said in a statement.

A 62-year-old man suffered minor injuries Sunday morning after he was pushed onto the subway tracks at the Fulton Street subway station in Lower Manhattan, the New York Police Department said. The man, who hasn’t been identified publicly, made contact with the lead train car while he was on the tracks, police said. He treated at a hospital for a leg laceration.

It wasn’t immediately clear if the attack was targeted. The NYPD has not made any arrests, and an investigation is underway, a spokesperson said.

“I don’t want to tell people that they should stand on subway platforms and feel like they’re, you know, in threat of their lives,” Lieber told WABC. “But everybody should stand away from the edge of the platform.”

Asked about platform screen doors—as used by subway systems in other countries—Lieber said there are physical constraints the MTA must consider, like the “ability to maintain ADA accessibility,” a reference to the Americans with Disabilities Act.

“Literally, the structure of our very old, 100-year-old stations don’t accommodate it,” Lieber said. “And there’s some real ventilation issues: How will we ventilate—for fire code safety and for human comfort—in that event?”

Sunday’s incident follows the death of Michelle Alyssa Go, who was pushed in front of a Times Square subway train on Jan. 15.  Go’s death has prompted authorities to reexamine safety at subway stations.

A man has been charged with second-degree murder in connection with Go’s death, which shocked residents of a city that has seen crime rise in the pandemic, and renewed calls for politicians to address a burgeoning homeless crisis.

On New Year’s Day, a good Samaritan died while trying to help a man who fell onto subway tracks during a gang assault. Around 2:40 a.m., people approached a 38-year-old man on the southbound B/D train platform in the Fordham Road subway station in the Bronx, the NYPD said. The gang “displayed a knife and began assaulting him,” and at some point, the man landed on the subway tracks, police said. It is unclear if he fell or was pushed.

A 36-year-old witness went down to the tracks to help the assault victim and was “subsequently struck by the oncoming train, causing his death,” police said. The train didn’t strike the assault victim, according to police, and he was treated for a fractured arm.

Though not near the rate of the early 1990s, crime in New York has been on the rise in recent months. In November—the most recent month for which the city has released data—the crime rate increased by 21.3 percent from the same period last year, according to the NYPD.

In the transit system, there were 28 robberies, 24 felony assaults, and 42 grand larcenies from January 1 to 16, compared to 13 robberies, 20 assaults, and 25 grand larcenies during the first 16 days of last year, according to the NYPD.

The CNN Wire contributed to this report.

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