You are reading

Man Struck Dead By Subway at 74th Street Station After Falling onto Tracks During Fight

A man was struck dead by an oncoming train at the 74th Street/Roosevelt Avenue subway station Monday after he fell onto the tracks during a fight with another straphanger (Photos: Citizen)

Oct. 18, 2022 By Michael Dorgan

A man was struck dead by an oncoming train at the 74th Street/Roosevelt Avenue subway station Monday after he fell onto the tracks during a fight with another straphanger.

The victim, Heriberto Quintana, 48, landed on the tracks at around 4:45 p.m. and was then hit by a Jamaica-bound F train that was entering the station, according to the NYPD. Police have yet to determine whether Quintana was pushed or whether he accidentally stumbled onto the tracks during the scuffle.

Quintana, who was from Jamaica Hills, was removed from under the train with severe trauma to the body. He was then transported by EMS to Elmhurst Hospital where he could not be saved.

Police say that Quintana was involved in a physical fight with a 50-year-old man on the northbound F-train platform moments before he was struck.

The fight started after Quintana accidentally bumped into the 50-year-old, the New York Post reported citing cops and police sources.

The 50-year-old’s cell phone then dropped onto the tracks and he yelled at Quintana to retrieve it. Quintana refused and the pair got into a scuffle, which resulted in Quintana falling on the tracks. The New York Post reported that Quintana was pushed, which the NYPD did not confirm.

An MTA worker said the two men had been arguing in Spanish before Quintana landed on the tracks.

“You could hear them yelling on the mezzanine level,” the worker told the Post. “Then I heard screams and ran down to the platform.”

The 50-year-old was taken into custody and the investigation is ongoing, police said.

He had not been charged as of Tuesday morning.

The Medical Examiner will ultimately determine the cause of death.

Should yesterday’s incident be ruled a homicide, it would take the number of murders in the city’s subway system this year to nine.

There were eight homicides in the subway system in all of 2021, a 25-year high.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

2 Comments

Click for Comments 
Bill

Even if the victim wasn’t pushed he landed on the tracks as a result of the actions of this sociopath. I do not want to be his next victim if I accidentally bump into him. Unfortunately there are millions like him in this city. Charge him with murder and make him serve time. A ma. Died a horrible death because of him.

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

City debunks drone reports over LaGuardia after real emergency unfolds in Queens skies

As drone hysteria swept from New Jersey across the Hudson River to New York City on Thursday night, fueled by online reports of nearly a dozen large drones spotted over Queens, a genuine emergency unfolded in the skies above the borough.

The Port Authority and Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) confirmed that a flight out of LaGuardia Airport earlier in the evening was forced to make an emergency landing at JFK Airport after a bird strike blew out an engine on the aircraft.

Op-ed: A new JFK Airport is a doorway to opportunity for local and diverse businesses

Dec. 12, 2024 By Elena Barcenas and Loycent Gordon

As successful small business owners here in Queens, we join all New Yorkers in looking forward to the transformation of JFK International Airport into the world-class airport our city deserves. But a new JFK will serve as more than a global gateway for travelers—for local and minority-owned businesses like ours, it will be a doorway to life-changing opportunities.