Two killed by NYC subway train after ‘woman fell on tracks and man jumped down to save her’
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A man, 44, and a woman, 63, killed by the New York subway after “she fell onto the tracks and he was trying to save her before he got pinned between the car and the platform,” as says the FDNY, cardiac arrest was reported.
- The fatal incident occurred at the 6th and 14th Street Station in lower Manhattan on Tuesday morning.
- Police are investigating a theory that the woman fell and the man tried to pull her out of danger.
- Mayor Eric Adams was on the scene shortly after the tragic incident to say that an investigation is underway, but no wrongdoing is suspected.
- Crime incidents on the New York City subway are at an all-time high
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Two people die after being struck by a subway train in lower Manhattan Tuesday morning.
A 44-year-old man from Long Island and a 63-year-old woman from Brooklyn were fatally struck by an L train around 10:30 a.m. at the 6th Avenue and 14th Street stop in Chelsea, according to the New York police.
Police are investigating the possibility that the man was a good Samaritan who had fallen onto the tracks after trying to catch the woman as she fell into the path of danger.
NYPD officers remove the body of a victim from the 6th Avenue and 14th Street station
The New York police emergency services remove the bodies of one of the two victims. A middle-aged man and woman were killed Tuesday morning around 10:30 a.m. by an L train
the woman was reportedly found under the train and the man was found squeezed into a space between the train and the platform around the sixth or seventh car of the train.
Investigators say the woman may have fallen between the subway cars when the train stopped and the man got out to try to rescue her.
After the man landed on the tracks, he tried to get back on the platform before the train took off but was crushed, the report said. New York Daily News.
The New York Fire Department reported receiving a call that a person on the tracks was suffering from cardiac arrest.
Witnesses told responding officers that they did not see anyone being pushed off the platform. No criminality is currently suspected in the fatal incident.
L train service halted for hours in both directions following holiday season tragedy
An investigation is underway, but no wrongdoing is currently suspected, according to Mayor Eric Adams, who arrived at the scene shortly after the incident.
On the scene shortly after the incident, which delayed L trains in both directions for hours, was Mayor Eric Adams.
Adams said he had been at 96th Street on the 1 train, inspecting the work the city, MTA and police officers are doing every day to improve the city’s ailing transportation system.
“It appears that it was not a crime,” Adams said. Eyewitness Newsadding that authorities are conducting a “further investigation.”
He said officers are going to “put it all together” and find out exactly what happened, but preliminary reports suggest there was no foul play in the tragic pre-Christmas incident.