NYPD is looking for suspect in the murder of Ki Suk Han. The man was pushed to his death when a subway approached. |
Who said riding the public transportation saves money?
I say it's more dangerous for anyone riding the public transportation.
Artis Hughes punches Shi'dia Lane after the woman verbally and physically assaulted him on his bus. |
And of course, this will have the White men in the conservative media angry at that Black "thug" who pushed that innocent Asian man into the path of an oncoming subway train.
NYPD officials are searching for a man suspected of pushing a Queens father onto the subway tracks where he was fatally struck by an oncoming train on Monday.
Time to take a picture! But not enough time to save a man's life! This is what Rupert Murdoch's newspaper does! |
Bystanders frantically waved and yelled, trying to halt the oncoming Q train from hitting Han, but their attempts proved futile.
"He got caught between the train and the edge of the platform," said William Van Alstyne, who witnessed the horrifying scene. "He got caught between the train and the edge of the platform. He got dragged. You could see the trail of blood from where he got hit to where he stopped.”
A Post freelance photographer happened to be on the platform and captured the moment just before Han's death. In the photo you can see Han trying to hoist himself up onto the platform, as the train comes barreling towards him. Umar Abbasi says he attempted to warn the train conductor by flashing his camera, but to no avail.
Before the incident, onlookers say the suspect and Han exchanged heated words.
NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said the suspect was believed to have been "talking to himself" and most likely instigated a fight with Han.
NYPD looking for the guy who pushed a man on the tracks. |
Han was rushed to St. Luke's Hospital where he was pronounced dead. He is survived by a wife and college-aged daughter.
Officials released this image of the man believed to be the attacker who pushed Han:
Our question to those who read the bold words, why take the picture when you could have helped the man get off the tracks?
Is a freaking photo more important than a life?
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