NYC vagrant pummels female straphanger in caught-on-video horror: cops

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NYC vagrant pummels female straphanger in caught-on-video horror: cops​



By
Craig McCarthy


September 26, 2022 5:28pm
Updated










Man viciously assaults woman at subway stop after ignoring him: cops






Shocking surveillance footage shows a woman being viciously assaulted by a homeless man in a Queens subway station after ignoring him on a train, police said Monday.
The attack happened just after 5 a.m. Sept. 20 as the 33-year-old victim tried to exit the northbound A train at the Howard Beach stop without engaging with the vagrant, cops said.
The suspect, Waheed Foster, 41, then chased the woman off the train, attacking her near the subway entrance, cops said.
The sickening footage shows Foster throwing the woman into the wall before repeatedly punching and kicking her on the ground, cops said.
At one point, the video captures another straphanger trying to jump in to help the woman, but Foster chases him away.
Foster, who has two other pending criminal cases on charges of criminal mischief and minor theft, was arrested shortly after on multiple felony-assault charges, court records show.


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A surveillance video shows a homeless man assaulting a woman at the Howard Beach–JFK Airport station in Queens on September 20, 2022.
A surveillance video shows a homeless man assaulting a woman at the Howard Beach-JFK Airport station in Queens on September 20, 2022. Twitter/CrimeInNYC

The suspect Waheed Foster chased the woman off the train before attacking her near the subway entrance.
The suspect, Waheed Foster, chased the woman off the train before attacking her near the subway entrance. Twitter/CrimeInNYC

Foster was arrested on multiple felony-assault charges for the attack.
Foster was arrested on multiple felony-assault charges for the attack. Twitter/CrimeInNYC



Judge Denise Johnson ordered Foster held without bail during his arraignment, records show.


The victim was treated at Jamaica Hospital and is expected to recover, cops said.
 


Queens subway-attack victim Elizabeth Gomes could lose vision in right eye
By Kevin Sheehan and
Jesse O’Neill
September 27, 2022 9:33am Updated




The Queens straphanger brutally beaten by a homeless man in a shocking caught-on-video attack may lose sight in her right eye — and is now desperately pleading for more cops in the transit system.

Elizabeth Gomes, 33, was dragged across the Howard Beach-JFK Airport station last Tuesday morning before being repeatedly kicked and punched in the face by Waheed Foster, a 41-year-old vagrant who was once convicted of beating his grandmother to death, according to police.

Gomes had gotten off the A train and was on her way to Kennedy Airport where she works as a security guard before the sickening 5:15 a.m. assault. She was trying to avoid Foster, but he targeted her.

The attack sent her to Jamaica Hospital with a serious eye injury, and her vision on her right side may be permanently lost, her husband told The Post on Tuesday.
Elizabeth Gomes and her husband leave their Rockaway home
Gomes was trying to avoid her attacker but he targeted her.
Gabriella Bass

“It’s crazy, she’s going to lose her sight if she doesn’t get some help real soon. Her pupil was outside her eye. Her eye!,” Clement Tucker, 41, said.
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Tucker and Gomes, who have three children together and five children in total between them, were headed Tuesday to Queens Criminal Court, where a grand jury was set to hear the evidence against Foster, Tucker said.
Man viciously assaults woman at subway stop after ignoring him: cops

“I can’t see anything on my right side, honestly. And it just hurts,” Gomes told ABC 7 earlier through tears, adding that her head throbs with pain and she has barely slept in the week since the attack.
Elizabeth Gomes and her husband headed to court.
Gomes, pictured on her way to court with her husband, demanded to know where all the police were when she was attacked.
Gabriella Bass
Elizabeth Gomes pictured with husband leaving Rockaway house
Gomes said she can’t see anything out of her right eye following the attack.
Gabriella Bass

Gomes exasperatedly asked where all the police were.

“Every day is an incident in the subway,” she told the outlet. “What happened to all these police officer [sic] they said they will have there to protect us? There’s like nobody to be found. I don’t understand.”

Straphangers are 42% more likely to be victims of violent crime now than before the pandemic started, according to NYPD data which showed there were 2.14 crimes per million riders last month compared to 1.5 crimes per million riders in August of 2019.
The attack happened just after 5 a.m. Sept. 20 as the 33-year-old victim tried to exit the northbound A train at the Howard Beach stop without engaging with the vagrant, cops said.
Gomes had gotten off the A train and was on her way to Kennedy Airport where she works as a security guard.
Shocking surveillance footage shows a woman being viciously assaulted by a homeless man in a Queens subway station after ignoring him on a train, police said Monday.
The attack sent her to Jamaica Hospital with a serious eye injury.

Police officials last week touted lower overall crime numbers in the system without taking into consideration the lower ridership caused by COVID-19 — and blamed the media for the perception that crime on the rails was on the ride.

In June, Mayor ERic Adams said he was increasing police presence in the subway and putting officers back on solo patrols, which were abandoned after the 2014 assassinations of two officers.

One man tried to come to Gomes’ aid but was scared off by the menacing brute, the footage showed.
Security footage of the beating
A witness tried to come to Gomes’ aid but was scared off.

Foster was charged with assault and held without bail, but Gomes told the outlet she wished there was an officer in the station to prevent the attack in the first place.


Foster beat his 82-year-old foster grandmother to death in an argument over money in 1995 when he was just 14, sources told The Post. In 2010, he stabbed a woman in the face at a mental institution and has also been arrested for assaulting a woman with a screwdriver, criminal mischief, robbery and larceny, the law enforcement sources said. He was on parole at the time of last week’s attack.
 


Ex-con allegedly pummeled woman in NYC subway after being freed on parole violation​



By
Larry Celona and

Mark Lungariello


September 30, 2022 7:23pm
Updated









Man viciously assaults woman at subway stop after ignoring him: cops



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More On: parole






A ex-con vagrant accused of beating a woman in a Queens subway station had been arrested for violating his parole weeks before the caught-on-video attack — only to be cut loose thanks to a state “reform’’ backed by Gov. Hochul, critics charge.
Waheed Foster, 41, was still on parole for an assault rap when he was arrested twice for misdemeanors in August, records show.
But instead of being held on the parole violation — as his parole officer wanted — a judge freed the career criminal, who also killed his grandma when he was 14.
New York state’s new “Less is More” act — signed into law by Hochul in 2021 — allowed the move by taking away the discretion of parole officers to be able to put dangerous criminals back behind bars themselves.
The law essentially allows accused parole violators new levels of due process, with the goal of keeping people with low-level technical violations out of jail. But critics say it is also resulting in alleged dangerous people walking free when they would have previously been locked up.
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00:01 01:08 Elizabeth Gomes was allegedly beaten while leaving a subway by Waheed Foster, 41, a vagrant with a history of violence.Elizabeth Gomes was allegedly beaten while leaving a subway by Waheed Foster, 41, a vagrant with a history of violence.Gabriella Bass
Foster was sprung on the parole violation Sept. 9 — and allegedly randomly attacked the woman in the subway a little over two weeks later.

Waheed FosterWaheed Foster had been arrested twice in August and accused of violating his parole but remained free until the attack of Sept. 20, 2022.
If Foster hadn’t been freed, then the victim in the attack wouldn’t be worried about losing vision in her right eye as a result of her injuries, a Manhattan cop told The Post.


“The governor has to rethink her orders on freeing parolees to walk the streets freely to pummel the helpless,’’ the cop said. “This is as bad as the bail reform laws.’’


Foster had a lengthy rap sheet including convictions for assaulting a woman with a screwdriver and for the 1995 beating death of his grandmother when he was a young teen, The Post previously reported.

Elizabeth Gomes feared a loss of vision in her right eye after the assault.Elizabeth Gomes feared a loss of vision in her right eye after the assault.Gabriella Bass
He had been released from prison last year after a 12-year sentence on the assault charge in Queens and was on parole through Nov. 1, 2024.


While under post-release supervision, he was arrested Aug. 21 on misdemeanor charges of criminal possession of stolen property and petit larceny.


Foster was arraigned and released but arrested the same day for criminal mischief, though charges weren’t filed in that case, sources said.


Even though both arrests were potential parole violations, he walked, pending a hearing process as outlined in the law.


He then failed to report to his parole officer Aug. 23, and an absconder warrant was issued Sept. 6 on behalf of the state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision for his arrest when subsequent attempts to locate or contact him weren’t successful.


Foster was arrested on the absconder warrant Sept. 8 but released on his own recognizance the next day by Judge David Lewis.


The suspect was freed despite arguments from the DCCS that he shouldn’t be released during the parole revocation process, a rep for the department told The Post.


still of attack
The brutal attack was caught on camera.

still of attack
Foster unleashes a fury of punches and kicks.



Lucian Chalfen, a spokesman for New York state courts, said in an e-mail, “Under Less is More, a recognizance-hearing court may order a Releasee be detained pending a revocation hearing only if the Releasee currently presents a substantial risk of willfully failing to appear at the-preliminary or final revocation hearings and that non-monetary conditions will not reasonably assure the Releasee’s appearance at the preliminary or final revocation hearing.


“So the Judge must release the Releasee on the least restrictive non-monetary conditions that will reasonably assure the releasee’s appearance at subsequent preliminary or revocation hearings and there is no provision for bail to be imposed.”


On the loose again after his hearing, Foster also ditched his preliminary parole revocation hearing scheduled for Sept. 16, according to the DOCCS rep.







No new date had been set for Foster’s hearing by the morning of Sept. 20, when he allegedly flew into a rage after straphanger Elizabeth Gomes ignored him as she got off the A-train at the Howard Beach-JFK Airport stop.


Foster tossed Gomes, 33, into a wall, then unleashed a flurry of punches and kicks, chasing off a good Samaritan who tried to intervene, according to police and video of the incident.


Gomes, who was on the way to work at JFK, previously told The Post she heard Foster ranting about the devil and “a whole a bunch of stuff you don’t want to hear at five o’clock in the morning” before he allegedly unloaded on her and badly bashed her right eye.


Foster is now being held at Rikers Island while awaiting his recognizance hearing, which was adjourned at the request of his lawyer, a DOCCS rep said.
 
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