DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Major transit crimes surge 17% as NYC sees first underground murder in 2026

February 14, 2026
in News
Major transit crimes surge 17% as NYC sees first underground murder in 2026

The city marked the year’s first fatal shooting in the subway this week as new NYPD stats show that crime in the city’s transit system is spiking, leaving fearful straphangers clamoring for more cops underground. 

Major crime, such as murder and rape, on subways and buses surged 17%, to 246 so far this year from 210 in the same period in 2025.

Robbery skyrocketed 58%, to 60 from 38, and assaults spiked 9%, to 71 from 65, according to NYPD data through Feb. 8.

Mugshot of Alberto Frias, a 27-year-old man wanted in connection with a homicide.
Police are looking for Alberto Frias, 27, for questioning in the fatal shooting in a Bronx subway station. DCPI

“You’ve got a lot of people walking around here with mental health issues and controlled substances,” said Michael Ford, a 74-year-old Manhattan retiree at the Times Square station.  “It’s not good because I take the subways a lot.” 

The septuagenarian blamed increased crime on drugs and homelessness, and called on Mayor Mamdani to pump up the police presence underground.

An NYPD spokesperson pointed out that the 17% increase so far this year amounts to merely 36 incidents or about six index crimes each day. The NYPD also blamed the frigid cold of early February.

“When it is cold, especially this cold, more people move into the transit system,” an NYPD spokesperson said.

Mamdani said he was pausing subway ejections during the city’s recent cold snap. At the same time, the NYPD added about 100 cops a day to the system to address the slight uptick, the spokesperson said.

Two police officers taping off a subway staircase with
Adrian Dawodu, 41, was fatally shot on a Bronx subway platform. Kyle Mazza/Shutterstock

“Also, six weeks is a statistically short time frame to allege any type of broad trend,” the spokesperson said.

Last year, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, with Mayor Adams, implemented a strategy to flood trains and platforms with cops, including two officers on every overnight train.

And by mid-2025, subway crime was at record lows compared to prior non-pandemic years. By the end of 2025, the city’s transit system was on track for its safest yearin a generation, with major crimes per millionriders dropping roughly 30% since 2021.

First responders carrying a shooting victim out of the 170th Street subway station.
The fatal shooting was the first murder in the city’s transit system in 2026.

The city’s first underground murder happened on Tuesday when a 41-year-old man was shot on a Bronx subway platform after an argument with the gunman, cops said. 

Adrian Dawodu was shot once in the thigh and once in the groin just before 3 p.m. on the southbound platform of the 170th Street B and D station, police said.

The victim, who was a regular at the station, was known for “yelling and screaming at people,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said.

First responders carry a shooting victim on a stretcher down a city street.
Dawoda was shot and killed at the Grand Concourse station when a dispute on the train spilled out onto the platform.

A terrifying video posted to social media captured the shooter firing his gun and striking the victim, causing him to slump to the ground next to a trash can.

Police identified 27-year-old Alberto Frias as a suspect after finding video that showed him fleeing the subway and going to his home nearby.

Detectives found a bullet casing on his bedroom floor and believe it fell out of his bloody clothing when he changed, Kenny said. They are looking for him.

The individual, Alberto Frias, wanted in connection with a homicide.
Frias seen in another photo. DCPI

Blake Hammond, a 21-year-old student and cancer researcher at Columbia University, said his sister takes the subway regularly and is frightened.

“It scares my sister really bad,” he said. “She wants more police on the subway.”

Elizabeth McDermott, a 55-year-old grandmother of two, blamed “the mentally ill people that are in the subway system.”

Transit crime surge.
NYPD data shows a crime surge in the city’s transit system so far this year. NY Post

“Bellevue has to come and get their patients,” she said.

Kelly Smith, a 66-year-old stylist from New Jersey, called her daily commute on the subway “scary.”

“I’m definitely more vigilant than I’ve ever been,” she said while in the Times Square subway station. “The politics in New York doesn’t help.”

The post Major transit crimes surge 17% as NYC sees first underground murder in 2026 appeared first on New York Post.

Jelly Roll’s wife, Bunnie Xo, details their challenging sex life before he lost weight: ‘He was so big’
News

Jelly Roll’s wife, Bunnie Xo, details their challenging sex life before he lost weight: ‘He was so big’

by Page Six
February 14, 2026

Bunnie Xo shared that while she and husband Jelly Roll “always had a sex life,” “there were mountains and valleys had ...

Read more
News

‘Buried at the Trump Golf Course’: Explosive FBI interview unearthed in Epstein files

February 14, 2026
News

TSA agents are working without pay due to another shutdown

February 14, 2026
News

Trump Sends Maher Hate-Fueled Valentine’s Message

February 14, 2026
News

Ilia Malinin’s collapse a reminder of how stressful the Olympic spotlight can be

February 14, 2026
Woman Apparently Crushed by Trash Compactor in Building, Police Say

Woman Apparently Crushed by Trash Compactor in Building, Police Say

February 14, 2026
The Rise of Stephen Miller

The Rise of Stephen Miller

February 14, 2026
Amazon’s Ring ends partnership with top operator of license-plate reading systems after Super Bowl ad raises fears of dystopian surveillance society

Amazon’s Ring ends partnership with top operator of license-plate reading systems after Super Bowl ad raises fears of dystopian surveillance society

February 14, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026