close
close

Prosecutor says man who fatally stabbed attacker on New York subway will not face charges – Winnipeg Free Press

Prosecutor says man who fatally stabbed attacker on New York subway will not face charges – Winnipeg Free Press

NEW YORK (AP) – A man who was attacked on a New York subway and fatally stabbed one of his attackers will not face criminal charges, a prosecutor said, as four men face assault and robbery charges.

Prosecutors said the 69-year-old man was sleeping on a train in Queens in the early morning hours of Dec. 22 when a group of men tried to steal his bags. The fight, captured on video, left an unidentified 69-year-old man surrounded by several men and beaten and kicked at the end of a subway car.

The man stabbed two attackers, Stalin Moya and Philipe Pena. Moya died from his injuries. The attacked man was taken to hospital with abrasions, cuts, contusions and bleeding to the head and face, the prosecutor said.

“The victim was accosted without provocation, and our investigation revealed that he was defending himself in an attempt to reclaim his property,” Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said in a statement Wednesday. “As a result, my office will not be filing charges in connection with the death.”

Katz’s announcement follows a wave of high-profile subway attacks that have unnerved passengers.

A man was accused of burning a sleeping woman alive in Brooklyn that same morning. Also in recent weeks, on New Year’s Eve, a man was pushed onto the subway tracks in front of an approaching train, and he stabbed two people at the Grand Central subway station in Manhattan.

Authorities said all of the men involved in the fight in Queens, including the 69-year-old man, were homeless.

Four men were indicted by a grand jury on robbery and assault charges: Pena, 26, Henry Toapanta, 32, Oswaldo Walter, 29, and Jose Valencia, 35. Pena and Walter were also charged with attempted gangland assault.

Walter’s attorney, David Bart, said he was waiting to review all the evidence in the case, but it seemed to him that prosecutors were “over-exaggerating” the case against his client.

Lawyers for Pena, Toapanta and Valencia did not immediately return messages seeking comment Friday.