Homeless Man Charged In Subway Pushing

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Homeless man charged in NY subway rider's death
By By COLLEEN LONG and DEEPTI HAJELA, Associated Press – 13 minutes ago
NEW YORK (AP) — While New York City straphangers pondered what they would do in a similar nightmare situation, authorities charged a homeless man in the death of a Queens resident pushed in front of an oncoming subway train and killed as onlookers watched.
"I would certainly try to do whatever I possibly could," said Denise Martorana, 34, as she waited for the "A'' train at Penn Station on Wednesday evening.
"I certainly wouldn't be able to stand there and watch, that's for sure," she said.
Naeem Davis, 30, was arraigned Wednesday night on a second-degree murder charge and ordered held without bail in the death of 58-year-old Ki-Suck Han on Monday. He is due back in court on Dec. 11.
As the handcuffed defendant walked past reporters he blamed the victim for what happened.
"He attacked me first. He grabbed me," Davis said.
Asked by a television news reporter if he meant to kill Han, Davis replied "No."
Prosecutor James Lin told the judge that Davis saw the train strike Han before leaving the Times Square station.
"The defendant never once offered any aid to the victim as the train approached the platform and in fact, this defendant watched the train hit the victim," Lin said.
But Davis' Legal Aid lawyer, Stephen Pokart, said outside court that his client reportedly "was involved in an incident with a man who was drunk and angry."
A witness, Leigh Weingus, told The New York Times that Han appeared to be aggressive toward Davis.
"The victim kept saying "Hey! Hey!' at the suspect, getting closer and closer to him," she said. "At first Davis appeared calm, saying 'I don't know you, you don't know me, get out of my face."
Han's wife had said she had argued with her husband that morning and that he had been drinking.
Davis has several prior arrests in New York and Pennsylvania on mostly minor charges including drug possession.
Han's death got widespread attention not only for its horrific nature, but because he was photographed a split-second before the train trapped him and seemingly no one attempted to come to his aid.
Han's only child, 20-year-old Ashley, said at a news conference Wednesday that her father was always willing to help someone. But when asked about why no one helped him up, she said: "What's done is done."
"The thought of someone helping him up in a matter of seconds would have been great," she said.
A freelance photographer for the New York Post was waiting for a train Monday afternoon when he said he saw a man approach Han at the Times Square station, get into an altercation with him and push him into the train's path.
The Post photo in Tuesday's edition showed Ki-Suck Han with his head turned toward the train, his arms reaching up but unable to climb off the tracks in time.
The photographer, R. Umar Abbasi, told NBC's "Today" show Wednesday that he was trying to alert the motorman to what was going on by flashing his camera.
He said he was shocked that people nearer to the victim didn't try to help in the 22 seconds before the train struck.
"It took me a second to figure out what was happening ... I saw the lights in the distance. My mind was to alert the train," Abbasi said.
"The people who were standing close to him ... they could have moved and grabbed him and pulled him up. No one made an effort," he added.
In a written account Abbasi gave the Post, he said a crowd took videos and snapped photos on their cellphones after Han was pulled, limp, onto the platform. He said he shoved them back as a doctor and another man tried to resuscitate the victim, but Han died in front of them.
Ashley Han and her mother, Serim Han, met reporters Wednesday inside their Presbyterian church in Queens. The family came to the U.S. from Korea about 25 years ago. They said Han was unemployed and had been looking for work. Their pastor said the family was so upset by the front-page photo of Han in the Post that they had to stay with him for comfort.
"I just wish I had one last chance to tell my dad how much I love him," Ashley Han said.
Subway pushes are feared but fairly unusual. Among the more high-profile cases was the January 1999 death of Kendra Webdale, who was shoved to her death by a former mental patient.
Straphangers said they were shocked by Han's death but that it's always a silent fear for many of the more than 5.2 million commuters who ride the subway on an average weekday.
"Stuff like that you don't really think about every day. You know it could happen. So when it does happen it's scary but then what it all comes down to is you have to protect yourself," said Aliyah Syphrett, 23, who sat on a bench as she waited at Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan.
If she saw someone fall or be pushed, "I would try to help them, and also inform them that at the end of the platform there are steps.... If you can run to the other end you can come right back up the steps. But I guess at that moment you're panicked."
Diana Henry, 79, a Long Island resident, was waiting for a train at 34th Street. She stood as far from the platform as possible — about a dozen feet back, leaning against the wall.
"I'm always careful, but I'm even more careful after what happened," she said. "I stand back because there are so many crazies in this city that you never know."
Associated Press writers Verena Dobnik, Karen Matthews and Tom Hays contributed to this story.
Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap...W_RR3Q?docId=74fb7685bda44020a518fb48e8a15b25

While this guy is a POS and showed depraved indifference to the victim, I thought he would be charged with manslaughter since it wasn't the push that killed Han, but the train itself, if Han had somehow landed on the 3rd fail from the fall THEN I could understand murder charges.

In that particular station ALL of the alternate escape options that were discussed here on BGOL in another thread were indeed available to Han, Han was not a big guy so he easily could've laid down & had the train go over him, he could've gone under the platform, or he could've gone to the area between tracks & between the tunnel supports.

I cannot help but think that Han being inebriated (and angry) compromised his thought process & his agility & played a significant part in his death, starting with arguing with a homeless man who specifically told him to "LEAVE ME THE FUCK ALONE!":smh:
 
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Wow that's bullshit. Shit is gettin too real nowadays. The fucker who took the pic could have helped him up faster than taking the pix.....ppl man...

Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2
 
Wow that's bullshit. Shit is gettin too real nowadays. The fucker who took the pic could have helped him up faster than taking the pix.....ppl man...

Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2

I agree. who ever took that picture...
 
Drunk mofos got super courage

End up fuckin with the wrong crazy mofo
 
Drunk mofos got super courage

End up fuckin with the wrong crazy mofo

Drunk & angry with his wife, the combo amped up his "liquid courage", if his public defender is worth two cents he'll use that angle to plea down to Man 2, although with the outrage surrounding this case the prosecutor might not go that low.
 
The photographer, R. Umar Abbasi, told NBC's "Today" show Wednesday that he was trying to alert the motorman to what was going on by flashing his camera.
He said he was shocked that people nearer to the victim didn't try to help in the 22 seconds before the train struck.
"It took me a second to figure out what was happening ... I saw the lights in the distance. My mind was to alert the train," Abbasi said.
"The people who were standing close to him ... they could have moved and grabbed him and pulled him up. No one made an effort," he added.
In a written account Abbasi gave the Post, he said a crowd took videos and snapped photos on their cellphones after Han was pulled, limp, onto the platform. He said he shoved them back as a doctor and another man tried to resuscitate the victim, but Han died in front of them.

:smh::smh:
 
Street vendor who fatally pushed man in front of Q train cleared of all charges
push18n.jpg

Naeem Davis was acquitted of all charges Monday in the fatal shoving of a 59-year-old Queens man.
(Alec Tabak for New York Daily News)
Shayna Jacobs
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Monday, July 17, 2017, 4:30 PM

A homeless street vendor was found not guilty Monday of killing a 59-year-old Queens man who was shoved to his death in 2012 in front of an oncoming Q train.

A lawyer patted Naeem Davis’s back after the jury acquitted the 35-year-old of all charges in the death of Ki-Suck Han at the W. 49th St. and Seventh Ave. station.

Davis bowed his head as the jury forewoman read not guilty to each charge: murder, manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

Davis had faced life behind bars on the top count stemming from the Dec. 3, 2012, shove that Davis claimed last week was in self-defense.

Jury sees video of Q train shove suspect bickering with victim

Justice Mark Dwyer set Davis free after sending home the jury, which had deliberated for three and 1/2 days in Manhattan Supreme Court.

Davis walked out of court a free man for the first time in more than five years.

"I'm feeling good," he said. "I'm thankful for my freedom, that's it."

He said he has plans to join his family in Paris.

Train push kill was not self-defense, jurors told in closing

"Like I said to (Ki-Suck Han’s) wife when I saw her at the precinct, I said ‘I'm sorry,' that I feel bad that she lost her husband,” Davis said. “But it's not something that I asked for.”

Jury forewoman Gretchen Pfeil, a Harlem professor, embraced Davis in the hallway upon his release.

“For me there was a lack of evidence on most of the charges,” she said.

push18n-2-web.jpg

Ki-Suck Han was killed in the shoving incident.
“By the end of our deliberations I believe that we were of one mind that he was in fact justified in his actions or at least the prosecution had not convinced us otherwise."

Man accused of subway-shove murder cut hair to elude cops: DA

Pfeil, 39, said she understood how Davis might have feared for his safety on the platform.

"If someone is standing within arm's reach of me and may have threatened me, may have threatened my life, I worry that they have a box cutter or an open bottle," she said.

Juror 7, a woman who declined to give her name, said the question of justification was key.

"We know that he did it. What we didn't know was whether he was justified, until the law was read to us," she said.

Psych exam ordered for killer Times Square subway pusher

She also said the lack of video footage of the shove itself was critical.

"There were no working cameras on the platform," she said. "That would have changed everything."

Davis left the courthouse with several Legal Aid attorneys to have lunch at Forlini's restaurant, where he ordered the fried tilapia.

He said he remained confident that he’d be cleared, even as he was jailed without bail.

"I was optimistic,” Davis said. “I knew it was going to happen eventually. If you work and have a job and do the right thing, the law will work out in your favor.”

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york...hove-murder-cleared-charges-article-1.3332685
 
Street vendor who fatally pushed man in front of Q train cleared of all charges
push18n.jpg

Naeem Davis was acquitted of all charges Monday in the fatal shoving of a 59-year-old Queens man.
(Alec Tabak for New York Daily News)
Shayna Jacobs
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Monday, July 17, 2017, 4:30 PM

A homeless street vendor was found not guilty Monday of killing a 59-year-old Queens man who was shoved to his death in 2012 in front of an oncoming Q train.

A lawyer patted Naeem Davis’s back after the jury acquitted the 35-year-old of all charges in the death of Ki-Suck Han at the W. 49th St. and Seventh Ave. station.

Davis bowed his head as the jury forewoman read not guilty to each charge: murder, manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

Davis had faced life behind bars on the top count stemming from the Dec. 3, 2012, shove that Davis claimed last week was in self-defense.

Jury sees video of Q train shove suspect bickering with victim

Justice Mark Dwyer set Davis free after sending home the jury, which had deliberated for three and 1/2 days in Manhattan Supreme Court.

Davis walked out of court a free man for the first time in more than five years.

"I'm feeling good," he said. "I'm thankful for my freedom, that's it."

He said he has plans to join his family in Paris.

Train push kill was not self-defense, jurors told in closing

"Like I said to (Ki-Suck Han’s) wife when I saw her at the precinct, I said ‘I'm sorry,' that I feel bad that she lost her husband,” Davis said. “But it's not something that I asked for.”

Jury forewoman Gretchen Pfeil, a Harlem professor, embraced Davis in the hallway upon his release.

“For me there was a lack of evidence on most of the charges,” she said.

push18n-2-web.jpg

Ki-Suck Han was killed in the shoving incident.
“By the end of our deliberations I believe that we were of one mind that he was in fact justified in his actions or at least the prosecution had not convinced us otherwise."

Man accused of subway-shove murder cut hair to elude cops: DA

Pfeil, 39, said she understood how Davis might have feared for his safety on the platform.

"If someone is standing within arm's reach of me and may have threatened me, may have threatened my life, I worry that they have a box cutter or an open bottle," she said.

Juror 7, a woman who declined to give her name, said the question of justification was key.

"We know that he did it. What we didn't know was whether he was justified, until the law was read to us," she said.

Psych exam ordered for killer Times Square subway pusher

She also said the lack of video footage of the shove itself was critical.

"There were no working cameras on the platform," she said. "That would have changed everything."

Davis left the courthouse with several Legal Aid attorneys to have lunch at Forlini's restaurant, where he ordered the fried tilapia.

He said he remained confident that he’d be cleared, even as he was jailed without bail.

"I was optimistic,” Davis said. “I knew it was going to happen eventually. If you work and have a job and do the right thing, the law will work out in your favor.”

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york...hove-murder-cleared-charges-article-1.3332685
Street vendor who fatally pushed man in front of Q train cleared of all charges
push18n.jpg

Naeem Davis was acquitted of all charges Monday in the fatal shoving of a 59-year-old Queens man.
(Alec Tabak for New York Daily News)
Shayna Jacobs
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Monday, July 17, 2017, 4:30 PM

A homeless street vendor was found not guilty Monday of killing a 59-year-old Queens man who was shoved to his death in 2012 in front of an oncoming Q train.

A lawyer patted Naeem Davis’s back after the jury acquitted the 35-year-old of all charges in the death of Ki-Suck Han at the W. 49th St. and Seventh Ave. station.

Davis bowed his head as the jury forewoman read not guilty to each charge: murder, manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

Davis had faced life behind bars on the top count stemming from the Dec. 3, 2012, shove that Davis claimed last week was in self-defense.

Jury sees video of Q train shove suspect bickering with victim

Justice Mark Dwyer set Davis free after sending home the jury, which had deliberated for three and 1/2 days in Manhattan Supreme Court.

Davis walked out of court a free man for the first time in more than five years.

"I'm feeling good," he said. "I'm thankful for my freedom, that's it."

He said he has plans to join his family in Paris.

Train push kill was not self-defense, jurors told in closing

"Like I said to (Ki-Suck Han’s) wife when I saw her at the precinct, I said ‘I'm sorry,' that I feel bad that she lost her husband,” Davis said. “But it's not something that I asked for.”

Jury forewoman Gretchen Pfeil, a Harlem professor, embraced Davis in the hallway upon his release.

“For me there was a lack of evidence on most of the charges,” she said.

push18n-2-web.jpg

Ki-Suck Han was killed in the shoving incident.
“By the end of our deliberations I believe that we were of one mind that he was in fact justified in his actions or at least the prosecution had not convinced us otherwise."

Man accused of subway-shove murder cut hair to elude cops: DA

Pfeil, 39, said she understood how Davis might have feared for his safety on the platform.

"If someone is standing within arm's reach of me and may have threatened me, may have threatened my life, I worry that they have a box cutter or an open bottle," she said.

Juror 7, a woman who declined to give her name, said the question of justification was key.

"We know that he did it. What we didn't know was whether he was justified, until the law was read to us," she said.

Psych exam ordered for killer Times Square subway pusher

She also said the lack of video footage of the shove itself was critical.

"There were no working cameras on the platform," she said. "That would have changed everything."

Davis left the courthouse with several Legal Aid attorneys to have lunch at Forlini's restaurant, where he ordered the fried tilapia.

He said he remained confident that he’d be cleared, even as he was jailed without bail.

"I was optimistic,” Davis said. “I knew it was going to happen eventually. If you work and have a job and do the right thing, the law will work out in your favor.”

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york...hove-murder-cleared-charges-article-1.3332685
So what happened.... Bruce pushed him and he pushed him back?
 
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