D Train Stabbing: Locking Down Train Was The Right Thing Says Bloomberg

First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 03:45 PM ET

Gerardo Sanchez

NEW YORK (Associated Press) - Drifter Dwight Johnson was on the subway with his bag on the seat next to him when another passenger demanded it be moved because he wanted the spot, even though there were plenty of empty seats on the late-night train.

The two argued briefly over the bag before Gerardo Sanchez, an exterminator still in uniform, snapped, police said. He pulled a knife and stabbed Johnson to death in front of horrified passengers on the "D" train early Saturday, police said.

On Monday, Mayor Michael Bloomberg defended what happened next: Passengers were briefly trapped with the suspect and the bleeding victim because police kept the subway doors closed as they combed the cars looking for the crime scene.

"Letting everybody run in every direction and have a murderer back on the streets doesn't make a lot of sense to me," Bloomberg said.

Immediately after the stabbing, someone pulled the emergency cord and the train screeched to a halt between Manhattan's Rockefeller Center and the next stop further north. Police said the 37-year-old Sanchez pried open the doors and dropped the knife on the tracks.

Just minutes later, the train was moving again as the engineer radioed ahead, and police met the train when it pulled into the station at 53rd Street. One door was opened as police worked their way back to the crime scene. Sanchez was arrested as he stood over the body, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Monday. The arrest took just minutes. No one else was injured.

Sanchez pleaded not guilty to charges of murder. His Legal Aid attorney did not immediately return a call seeking comment. His brother, Louis Sanchez, told reporters that the family was struggling to understand what happened.

"He's a family man, he's not a beast," the brother told reporters after the arraignment Sunday.

Louis Sanchez told the Daily News that his brother recently had been hurt in a workplace accident and had been taking pain medication. He was being held without bail.

Johnson, 36, died at the scene. Little was known about him, and there was no number at the address provided by police.

Bloomberg noted the subways are safer than ever, and there had not been a slaying in the subway system this year.

"I have empathy for everybody that is in danger," the mayor said of the passengers on the train with the suspect. "The truth of the matter is our subways are very, very safe," he said.

About 5.2 million people ride the New York City subway every day.

Quick Poll

Should the police have locked the passengers in with the alleged killer?

Yes, it was the right thing to do

No way

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NEW YORK (Associated Press) - Drifter Dwight Johnson was on the subway with his bag on the seat next to him when another passenger demanded it be moved because he wanted the spot, even though there we...
NEW YORK (Associated Press) - Drifter Dwight Johnson was on the subway with his bag on the seat next to him when another passenger demanded it be moved because he wanted the spot, even though there we...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UnknownSolider
09:32 PM on 11/24/2009
The Police could have emptied the train STATION, and blocked the exits before the train got to the station.

Then the passengers would have pointed out the killerbecause he would be the one everyone was moving away from, and besides no one would have be able to leave the train station.

Locking the innocent witnesses in the Train Car with a suspect is just bad lazy police work, had someone else been hurt because of the negligent police work, the city would be sued for millions.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
05:14 PM on 11/24/2009
Hard to criticize the cops on this decision.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UnknownSolider
09:33 PM on 11/24/2009
it was a bad move, but no unusual for the NYPD
03:56 PM on 11/24/2009
No way in HELL do I want to be locked on a train with some madman with a knife. What if he had a gun and a clip with 12, 16 rounds in there?? Now you're going to pull the chord and lock me in the car with this dude?? Uhh, no thanks, yo.

1) Each car should be unlocked and you should be allowed to get between cars, no matter the situation.

2) Do away with the emergency brake. Seriously, it's an extremely misleading concept. If anything, when you pull it the train should go to the next stop and immediately open the doors.

Once again, I guess these rules don't apply to Herr Bloomberg, so it doesn't matter that these peeps were locked in the car with a murderer. Of course he said it was the right thing to do (lock the people in with the murderer) because he wasn't in there with him!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UnknownSolider
09:34 PM on 11/24/2009
doesn't want to get sued
02:47 PM on 11/24/2009
I think they definitely did the right thing. Obviously, nobody wanted to be near an obvious murderer for fear of being hurt similarly, but, consider this. If they had opened the doors, he would have been around just as many people, if not more of them. Moreover, the prospect of stabbing a second person, perhaps one who got in his way on his way out, may have then seemed more attractive since he now had a chance at escaping the police. In contrast, there isn't much to be gained by stabbing a 2nd person when trapped in a locked car with dozens of other people. He knew he could not get out and could not overpower everyone in the car. So, locking the car down ensured that the murderer was captured and decreased the likelihood that he would hurt others while escaping or later on.

Of course, all of this is predicated on the fact that he only had a knife. So, what I'd like to know is whether the person who issued the lockdown knew that the murderer only had a knife. If he had a gun, I don't think my argument holds at all. People with guns feel much more emboldened. He could have taken multiple hostages or simply massacred people if he felt he had no way out. It would be like the police locking the doors to a bank before the bank robbers even knew the police were involved.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SusanStoHelit
02:33 PM on 11/24/2009
5.2 million people ride the subway every day. This entire year, 10 and a half months - no deaths. One death is not any big New York trend - it's one irrational person.

And locking them in, especially when it's a knife, not a gun, makes sense. Let the killer out, he'll get away to kill again. Lock him in, and he can be arrested - and no indication he was hurting anyone else.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UnknownSolider
09:35 PM on 11/24/2009
its bad policy
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim303
02:31 PM on 11/24/2009
Family man? Yes if your family is the Manson family...
02:11 PM on 11/24/2009
Don't F with

THE EXTERMINATOR
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Bitsko
He of the smoldering eyes
01:14 PM on 11/24/2009
For once, I have to agree with the cops on this one.
01:06 PM on 11/24/2009
hindsight is 20/20 .... so , everyone safe, perp caught ,,,, it was right
12:50 PM on 11/24/2009
America is looking more and more like the very place we claim to detest. We need to teach peace and love towards each other. We get vitriol and anger coming out of our tubes nightly as if this is the way things are supposed to be. Well this isn't the way things are supposed to be.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KidHollywood
01:34 PM on 11/24/2009
What you want to go hug the guy who stabbed the dude?
02:05 PM on 11/24/2009
You missed the point entirely.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SusanStoHelit
02:30 PM on 11/24/2009
Ummm - this is one murder out of millions of passengers on the subway. Not exactly a good case for your point - seems to be proving the opposite.

One person snapped, for no good reason - not even overcrowded subways - the car was substantially empty. One death out of millions of passengers with safe trips is not "vitriol and anger coming out of our tubes nightly".
12:45 PM on 11/24/2009
I understand why they did it, but I would not want to be locked in a train with a killer. No way!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheWanderer
Above us only sky
12:43 PM on 11/24/2009
Of course they were right to do it - cops never ever do anything wrong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Meggie
Your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines.
12:21 PM on 11/24/2009
So, Mr. Bloomberg, rather than having you trap me in a subway car with a knife-wielding maniac, I will get as far away from the indicent as possible, get off the subway, and then make some attempt to let police know that something happened? How about you maintain a presence on the platorm, close off the subway exit and let passengers off the cars? As long as my risk lessens when I do not report the crime, then that's what you'll get.
12:15 PM on 11/24/2009
Just over the summer I was on the 6 when a fight broke out. The train stopped at 3rd Ave and the doors were locked with the police on their way. The train was pretty crowded. Once the aggressor realized what was going on he went nuts, started punching random people. I shudder to think what would've happened if he had a knife.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Meggie
Your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines.
12:22 PM on 11/24/2009
Exactly. I see no sense in reporting the crime if you're putting yourself in much greater danger by doing so.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Meggie
Your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines.
12:22 PM on 11/24/2009
Amended - report the crime AFTER you're off the subway car, not while you're still trapped.
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chaya
Another proud veteran
12:14 PM on 11/24/2009
I've been taking pain medication since '92. I haven't killed anyone.