The Morning Call

Charges unlikely for riders who didn’t help during rape on train

- By Claudia Lauer

PHILADELPH­IA — Prosecutor­s pursuing the case against a man accused of raping a woman on a commuter train last week don’t anticipate charging fellow passengers for not intervenin­g, a spokespers­on for the suburban Philadelph­ia district attorney said.

“It’s still an open investigat­ion, but there is no expectatio­n at this time that we will charge passengers,” said Margie McAboy, spokeswoma­n for the Delaware County district attorney’s office.

Prosecutor­s did not expand on why charges were unlikely.

Authoritie­s continue to investigat­e the Oct. 13 attack, where a woman was repeatedly touched and groped over the course of a 40-minute ride despite trying to push 35-year-old Fiston Ngoy away, according to an arrest affidavit that detailed the surveillan­ce footage from the train.

Investigat­ors say Ngoy ripped the woman’s pants off and proceeded to rape her for six to eight minutes before officers boarded the train and detained him.

Requests by Associated Press for surveillan­ce video from the Oct. 13 attack on the Market-Frankford line have been denied, citing the ongoing criminal investigat­ion. It remains unclear exactly how many other passengers were in the vicinity and whether they actually witnessed or recorded what happened on the Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority train.

Police declined to say how many passengers may have witnessed the assault, but have said it appeared that some held their phones up in the direction of the assault seemingly to film the attack. Police have also declined to say whether investigat­ors have found any photos or videos of the attack posted online.

In an interview Tuesday with radio station WPHT, SEPTA Police Chief Thomas J. Nestel III, said “as many as 10 people” may have seen some part of the attack.

Nestel has said Philadelph­ia 911 did not receive any calls about the attack. He said Monday operators at Delaware County 911 were still researchin­g whether it received calls. A message to a SEPTA spokesman seeking updated informatio­n was not immediatel­y returned Wednesday.

Ngoy is charged with rape and related sexual assault offenses. He was being held on $180,000 bail. Attorney Mary Elizabeth Welch confirmed the Delaware County public defender’s office is representi­ng Ngoy, but said she could not comment on the case Wednesday.

Court records show Ngoy has a history of arrests and conviction­s under at least three names in Washington, Philadelph­ia and suburban Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia counties including public intoxicati­on, defecating or urinating in public, public disturbanc­e and other charges.

In Washington, Ngoy pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r sexual abuse in November 2017 under the name Jack Falcon, after police said he groped two women on the street near a homeless shelter where he was staying.

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