PRESENTED BY (NEWS TODAY)
New york Dec 29 Police in New York are searching for a woman who allegedly shoved an Indian immigrant man to his death in front of a train on a New York City subway platform.
New york Dec 29 Police in New York are searching for a woman who allegedly shoved an Indian immigrant man to his death in front of a train on a New York City subway platform.
The victim was identified as Sundown Sen,
46, of Queens, who had been raised in India and who, after years of
toil, had finally saved enough money to open a small copying business
this year on the Upper West Side, media reports said.
It was the second time in a month that a man had been pushed under a train in New York.
Police are searching for a woman
seen running from an elevated station for the No. 7 train in Queens on
Thursday evening, CNN reported Friday citing Deputy Commissioner Paul
Browne.
According to witnesses cited by
the channel, the woman was pacing the platform and talking to herself
shortly before pushing Sen onto the tracks as the 11-car train entered
the station. The victim's body was pinned under the second car after it
came to a stop.
Police described her as a
heavyset woman in her 20s, wearing a ski jacket and sneakers. Security
video shows her running from the scene shortly after 8 p.m. Thursday.
Sen's roommate, Ar Suman, 33, told CNN Friday that after living together for over a year they had become like "family."
"I came home and I heard this happened," Suman was quoted as saying, "I am feeling very bad."
Sen owned a shop called New Amsterdam Copies and was a graphic designer for posters, according to Suman.
"He was a very educated person
and quite nice," Suman, one of four roommates who shared a small
first-floor apartment with Sen in Elmhurst, was quoted as saying by the
New York Times. "It is unbelievable. He never had a problem with
anyone."
Suman said that as far as he knew, Sen did little more than work and
come home. Both his parents were dead, they said, and he was not married
and had no children.
Sen suffered a heart attack about
nine months ago, Suman was quoted as saying by the Times, but did not
slow down. The night stand in Sen's bedroom had many bottles of
prescription medicine. Across the room on his desk was a pile of medical
bills.
His roommates said he liked
watching funny clips on YouTube to unwind, enjoyed a cup of tea and
would relax listening to classical Indian music.
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