Woman randomly shoved into NYC subway downgraded to critical condition
New York Post
May 22, 2023
Lexington Avenue-63rd Street station
The woman who was randomly shoved
into a Manhattan train over the weekend is listed in critical
condition, cops said — as they released photos of the suspected
attacker.
The 35-year-old victim was walking on the southbound platform at the
Lexington Avenue-63rd Street station around 6 a.m. Sunday when a man
came up behind her and pushed her head into a departing E train, police
said.
She was taken to Weill Cornell Medical Center, authorities said.
Police initially said she was listed in stable condition — but reported
later Sunday and confirmed early Monday that the straphanger’s condition
was critical.
The injured straphanger is listed in critical condition, cops said as they released photos of the suspect.
The victim was being treated for cuts on her head and spinal injuries, police said.
Her attacker individual fled on foot, heading toward the Second Avenue exit.
The surveillance photos, released Sunday evening, show the man
holding what appears to be a cup of coffee while standing or walking on
the platform.
He was still at large Monday morning.
_________________
NYC subway shove victim, who now needs spinal surgery, kept asking witness: ‘Am I going to die?’
A woman who was randomly shoved into the side of a moving subway car
wondered if she was “going to die” after the terrifying attack — which
put her in the hospital in desperate need of spinal surgery, police and a
witness said Monday.
Nancy Marrero, 45, of Long Island City, said she spotted the victim
fixing her hair while walking on the platform of the Lexington
Avenue-63rd Street station around 6 a.m. Sunday when a man suddenly
grabbed her head and ground it into the side of the departing train.
“She didn’t even see it coming,” Marrero told The Post. “With open
palms he just mushed her head — not her body — into the train. She just
tumbled, just kept spinning because the train kept hitting her.”
The victim’s face was left gashed to the bone, Marrero recalled.
“You could see the white inside, that’s how bad it was,” the postal
worker said of the resulting gash that laced its way down the woman’s
bloody face. “She said, ‘I don’t feel my arms. I feel like they’re
broken.’
“She just kept asking me, ‘Am I going to die?'”
Authorities brought the victim, identified as Emine Ozsoy, 35,
to Weill Cornell Medical Center, where doctors diagnosed her with a
spinal fracture and said she would need surgery.
Police are searching for the man who allegedly shoved a woman into a moving subway car on Sunday morning.
The NYPD is asking for the public’s help
finding her attacker, whom police described as a man between the ages
of 30 and 40 years old who stands about 5 feet 7 inches tall. He has a
light complexion and ran off toward Second Avenue, cops said.
Marrero said Ozsoy told her immediately after the shoving that she didn’t know her attacker — or what had just transpired.
“I was like, ‘Do you know him?’ Marrero said. “She was like, ‘I don’t
even know what happened.’ I said, ‘A gentleman just shoved your head
into the train.’ She was like, ‘Oh my God, I don’t — I don’t even… I
can’t even remember what happened.”
Ozsoy kept saying she wanted to go to sleep. But Marrero wouldn’t let her.
“I was like, ‘No, don’t go to sleep. Keep talking to me. You’re going
to be fine,” Marrero said. “Every time she went to close her eyes, I
would talk to her and she opened them back up. But she said she felt
very weak, tired and sleepy.”
Surveillance photos released Monday showed the suspect loitering around the platform holding a cup of coffee.
A close-up of the suspect.
The assailant didn’t look homeless or dirty, Marrero said. And the attack left her deeply shaken.
“When I got home that evening, I was in tears because I just kept
seeing her face, seeing how he just mushed her into that train,” Marrero
said.
“I am so frightened, and my son is frightened for me for when I have to
leave in the morning to go to work,” Marrero said. “Now I keep my back
against anything I can. I’m traumatized.”
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