New York City police were hunting Monday for a man who was
last seen coming out of a Bronx bodega, minutes after pushing a
61-year-old man in front a moving subway train Sunday near Yankee
Stadium, authorities said.
Police have recovered several clips of
surveillance video that shows the suspect’s movements immediately after
he pushed Wai Kuen Kwok in front of a southbound D train as it was
pulling into the station.
Mr. Kwok was pronounced dead at the
scene. His wife chased the suspect, shouting “push, push,” but was not
able to keep up with him, authorities said. There was no dispute or
altercation between the two men before the accident, a law-enforcement
official said.
Unlike "Hidden Homicides" this killing was witnessed.
However, it was not recorded on an MTA surveillance camera because there was no MTA camera.
But the accused killer was filmed after the fact, again not by an MTA camera, but by one in a private business, a bodega.
A smarter killer would attack only lone passengers like those twenty-four individuals
whose 2012 deaths were classified as "accidents." With little chance of an MTA camera recording it he would have committed the "perfect" crime.
© 2015 by James Graham