A woman set on fire inside a New York City subway has raised questions about how a world traveler and former Merck employee ended up homeless and burned on a train.
The chance of being a crime victim in the subway is remote. But riders feel far more at risk than they do driving on New York ...
The man charged with burning a woman to death on a New York City subway train pleaded not guilty Tuesday to murder and arson ...
I don’t know what happened, but I’m very sorry for that woman,” 33-year-old suspect Sebastian Zapeta-Calil said.
The two men, one 30, the other 50, were on the 4/5/6 uptown platform at the Midtown Manhattan transit hub when they started ...