Posted: Wednesday, 05 December 2012 4:32AM

Suspect 'implicates' self in death of man pushed onto subway track



NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York police said on Tuesday that a suspect they questioned in the death of a 58-year-old man who had been pushed onto a subway track and killed by a train on Monday has implicated himself in the incident.

The train had crushed Ki-Suck Han in front of horrified commuters after he was shoved onto the track as the southbound Q subway pulled into the station at 49th Street near Times Square.

The assailant's image was captured on subway security cameras.

Police spokesman Paul Browne said earlier Tuesday that detectives were questioning a man who resembles the assailant after locating him near 50th Street and Seventh Avenue, not far from the station where the subway incident occurred.

Browne later said the man, 30, had "implicated himself in the incident" to detectives. Browne declined to identify the suspect. The New York Post identified the man as Nieem Davis, a street vendor from the borough of Queens.
Witnesses saw the suspect talking to himself before the altercation, leading to suspicion he may have been mentally disturbed, police said.

Story & Photos Copyright 2012 Reuters
Filed Under :  
Topics : Human Interest
Social :
Locations : New York
People : Paul Browne

WATCH: Horrific Oklahoma tornado footage

Survivors pulled from Oklahoma tornado debris

WATCH: Women finds missing dog alive in rubble

Court orders prison to hand over files in Boston bomb case

Yahoo buying Tumblr for $1.1 billion

Winning $590.5 million Powerball lottery ticket sold in Florida

Powerful tornadoes strike in four central states

VIDEO: Meteoroid impact triggers bright flash on the moon

House lawmakers reach deal to revamp immigration

House votes to repeal Obamacare for 37th time

Judge to hear insanity defense in theater shooting case

Boston bombing suspect wrote message in boat

Tornadoes rip through Texas, killing six

As scandals mount, White House springs into damage control

Tax chief forced out in IRS scandal

White House releases Benghazi attack emails