Would-be chain thief slashes woman with razor on NYC train in latest transit chaos: cops
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Would-be chain thief slashes woman with razor on NYC train in latest transit chaos: cops
"The victim was riding a northbound 2 train passing through the Pelham Parkway station around 5:30 p.m. when the perp - a stranger - inserted herself in a conversation the victim was having and sparked a fight, authorities and sources said. The perp then cut the victim with a razor and tried but failed to grab her chain, authorities said."
"The pink coat-wearing attacker got into an argument with the young teen on board a G train at Metropolitan Avenue in Williamsburg around 7:50 a.m. Nov. 17, authorities said. The fired-up fiend then grabbed the girl's throat and squeezed, making it hard for her to breathe, police said. The heartless assailant, shown in a surveillance image released by the NYPD late Tuesday, fled out of the train and cops are still looking to track her down, police said."
"Last week's subway mayhem also included a wild, caught-on-video outburst in which Tyquan Manassa, 28, allegedly knifed two men on the southbound platform of the E and F train at the Union Turnpike station in Kew Gardens Nov. 19, cops said. And on Nov. 16, Aaron Nett, 33, allegedly shoved a good Samaritan into a moving Harlem train - breaking her back - when she tried to break up a fight inside the 135th Street 2 and 3 train station, prosecutors and sources said."
A woman was slashed with a razor during an attempted chain theft on a northbound 2 train at Pelham Parkway around 5:30 p.m.; the suspect inserted herself into the victim's conversation, sparked a fight, and fled after failing to steal the chain. In an unrelated Brooklyn incident, a pink coat-wearing attacker grabbed and squeezed a 13-year-old girl's throat on a G train at Metropolitan Avenue; the teen was treated for neck injuries and the assailant fled, with police releasing a surveillance image. Other recent incidents include an alleged Nov. 19 knife attack that injured two and a Nov. 16 shove that broke a bystander's back.
Read at New York Post
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