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		Man fatally shot on New York City subway in latest random attack
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		 [May 23, 2022] By 
		Dan Whitcomb 
 (Reuters) -A 48-year-old man was fatally 
		shot in the chest while riding on a New York City subway car on Sunday 
		in the latest in a series of random attacks in the city's transit 
		system.
 
 The unidentified gunman fled when the train pulled into the next 
		station, in Manhattan, and remained at large on Sunday night, Kenneth 
		Corey, NYPD's chief of department, said at a news briefing.
 
 "Preliminary investigation reveals the suspect was walking back and 
		forth in the same train car and, without provocation, pulled out a gun 
		and fired it at the victim at close range as the train was crossing the 
		Manhattan Bridge," Corey said.
 
 The gunman, described only as a heavy-set, "dark-skinned" man with a 
		beard who was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, gray sweat pants and white 
		sneakers, fled when the train pulled into the Canal Street station.
 
 The suspect and the victim were not acquainted and had not interacted 
		prior to the gunfire, police said. The victim, who was not identified by 
		police, was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital shortly after the 11:40 
		a.m. shooting.
 
 "My heart breaks for the victim’s family. Everyone deserves to feel safe 
		on our subways. I’ll keep fighting to make that a reality," New York 
		Governor Kathy Hochul said on Twitter.
 
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			A commuter walks through the 42nd Street Bryant Park subway station 
			during what is typically rush hour, but is largely empty due to the 
			coronavirus disease (COVID-19) forcing large numbers of people to 
			stay home in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., March 18, 2020. 
			REUTERS/Andrew Kelly 
            
			 
            New York City has seen a sharp rise in violence and a 
			series of random attacks on subway riders.
 The transit violence has included passengers pushed onto the tracks 
			from platforms, including a Manhattan woman whose murder was seen as 
			part of a surge in hate crimes against Asian Americans.
 
 On April 12, a gunman set off smoke bombs and opened fire in a 
			subway car, wounding more than 20 people. A suspect was taken into 
			custody the following day.
 
 "It's pretty harrowing stuff," rider Arsenault Rivera told the New 
			York Times. "If I'd gotten on at a different point, I would have 
			been right there."
 
 (Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Paul Simao)
 
            
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