MTA touts subway system safety — just hours after a pair of violent transit attacks



MTA officials touted a “historic” dip in Big Apple subway crime in a glowing announcement Sunday — just hours after a straphanger was slashed and another shoved onto the tracks by a muttering maniac.

The transit agency said July produced the lowest transit-crime stats since the data was first collected in 1995, with an 8% drop in felonies in the subways last month — including a 16.7% plummet in robberies and a 9.3% decrease in felony assaults compared to the same month last year.

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“It’s clear the efforts to increase overnight patrols, deploy thousands more security cameras and expand mental health outreach are having real positive impacts,” MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber said in a statement.

The MTA says assaults and robberies were down to historic levels last month compared to 2024, but crime underground continues to plague the city. Christopher Sadowski

“By working closely with Gov. [Kathy] Hochul and the NYPD, we’re making sure the transit system not only is safe, but feels safe for our six million daily riders,” Lieber said.

But try telling that to some of this month’s victims — including an ER pediatrician at Harlem Hospital who just feels “happy he’s still alive” after his brush with death on the rails over the weekend.

The 44-year-old doctor was heading home from work and waiting for a No. 1 train in Manhattan around 8 p.m. Saturday — a few hours before the MTA’s crowing press release — when a screaming vagrant randomly shoved him onto the tracks.

The banged-up doc was able to scramble back up onto the platform with help from other straphangers before a train was set to barrel into the station fewer than 4 minutes later. His assailant fled the station and remains on the loose.

About an hour after that attack, another subway rider was slashed in the neck and armpit after getting into a spat with a knife-wielding nut at an East Village station.

A 44-year-old doctor who was randomly shoved onto the tracks is fortunately able to share a light moment with first responders afterward. William Miller
MTA officials said subway crime is down significantly so far this year compared to last year despite recent attacks. AFP via Getty Images

That attacker also fled the station and remains on the loose, while his victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital and treated for his injuries, according to police.

The back-to-back transit assaults came after another attack Wednesday, when a masked thug slashed a 29-year-old woman multiple times after she refused to surrender her back at the Wall Street station.

Saturday night saw a straphanger stabbed and another shoved onto subway tracks, with both suspects still free. Christopher Sadowski

The crook demanded the woman’s back aboard a northbound No. 3 train around 11:10 p.m. when he attacked her, according to police and law enforcement sources.

Still, according to MTA statistics, subway crimes are not only down month-over-month from last year, but also year-to-date, “led by a drop in overall assaults, even as more riders return to the system,” the transit agency’s chief security officer, Michael Kemper, said in the statement.

MTA officials did not respond to a Post request for comment Sunday.


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