A New York subway conductor makes a tragic discovery on the train: a dead woman
The New York City The medical examiner’s office is working to determine the cause of death of a woman after her body was found on a subway train, police said.
Around 2 p.m. Saturday, officers responded to a 911 call at the Jamaica-179 Street station, where they found an “unconscious, unresponsive and unidentified female adult” on a northbound F train, according to a statement from the NYPD.
EMS treated the woman and pronounced her dead at the scene. She is probably homeless and between 50 and 60 years old The New York Post reports.
She was found while the conductor was making a round trip to the first stop of the train in the borough of Queens, police told the media. The woman had no signs of trauma, the Post writes.
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No arrests have been made and the investigation is ongoing, the NYPD said.
In the middle of a rush high-profile crime storiesriders on the New York subway have expressed concern for their safety, suggesting that train-car violence is becoming a looming problem in the Big Apple.
“You never know what can actually happen in these subway systems,” Haisley, who was born and raised in Brooklyn, told Fox News Digital.
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Haisley suggested that the influx of people into New York City, as well as progressive crime policies, were largely to blame for subway crimes. He made a special announcement New York Governor Kathy Hochul because he failed to solve problems with prison and bail reforms.
“We never feel safe on the subway,” a female subway rider told Fox News Digital.
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Citing homelessness issues and a recent incident in which a migrant from Guatemala was arrested in connection with the death of a woman which was set on firea subway driver said that people now have a lot of fear when riding mass transit.
FOX News’ Nikolas Lanum and Kayla Bailey contributed to this report.