Man stabbed in back by stranger in NYC subway, second this month

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A man was stabbed in the back by a stranger while waiting for a subway on NYC’s Upper West Side — the second person attacked from behind with a blade in the city’s subway system this month, police said Saturday. 

The 23-year-old was on the northbound No. 1 platform at 96th and Broadway around 7 p.m. Friday when he had an argument with another rider, according to police sources.

The assailant then plunged the blade into his back, cops said.

A man was stabbed in the back while waiting for an uptown 1 train, cops said. Christopher Sadowski

The victim was taken to Mt. Sinai-Morningside Hospital in stable condition and was expected to survive, cops said.

The suspect was described as a light-skinned male with a slim build who fled to the street level, the sources said.

The nature of the dispute wasn’t immediately known. Cops recovered the knife on the scene.

It’s unclear what the victim and his attacker argued about before the stabbing, police said. Christopher Sadowski

Earlier this month, a 45-year-old man was stabbed in the back during a morning rush-hour clash inside the Union Square subway station, cops said. 

The victim was on the L train platform at the 14th Street-Union Square hub around 10 a.m. when he was knifed in the back during a dispute, authorities said.

The knifeman fled after the stabbing and there were no arrests, cops said. Google Maps

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital in stable condition, police said. The male attacker fled the scene and there were no arrests, cops said.

Police didn’t immediately answer when asked if investigators were looking into whether the two stabbings were connected.

Gov. Kathy Hochul announced last week that subway crime has dipped to its lowest level in 16 years. And overall transit crime is nearly 15% lower than in the pre-pandemic year of 2019, she said.

She also committed to giving another $77 million for keeping NYPD officers in the subway system during 2026 despite incoming Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s plans to replace some transit cops with social workers. 

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