New York Post

It's a tough (fare) beat

6 cops, 15 min. to nab 1 in Times Sq.

- By DANA KENNEDY

It took six undercover cops 15 minutes to restrain a single fare-dodger at New York’s busiest station — a scene that illustrate­s just how difficult it is to tackle the MTA’s crisis.

The Post watched at the Times Square station as the man refused to provide ID and yelled, “Bruh! Bruh! You can’t do this to me, no!” in front of commuters — then dropped to his feet, forcing cops to cuff him and finally drag him to the precinct as he continued shouting.

The suspect turned out to have a bench warrant for criminal possession of stolen property and behaved so erraticall­y that cops sent him to Bellevue Hospital for observatio­n.

And in the 15 minutes it took the entire squad to deal with him, The Post watched fare-beater after fare-beater jump the turnstile or walk through the open emergency door at just one entrance in the Times Square station.

Tuesday’s arrest was part of a two-hour deployment watched by The Post at Times Square of NYPD plaincloth­es transit cops, who issued 10 summonses and made three arrests for theft of service — part of a crackdown on fare-beaters designed to root out violent criminals and repeat offenders.

“I wish we could stop everyone but we can’t, but we conduct these targeted operations at stations where we’re having complaints or we’re having high crime to get the recidivist­s off the street, even just for a day,” Inspector Jonathan Bobin, commanding officer of the Transit Bureau’s Special Operations Division, told The Post.

“When you’re a paying customer, you see other people not paying. It’s one of several things that can lead to a sense of disorder on the subway system,” he said.

‘Stopping large numbers’

The most recent MTA data show fare-beating in the subway and on buses cost straphange­rs an eyewaterin­g $690 million last year.

An estimated 14% of subway riders jumped the turnstiles between July and September of last year — the highest level recorded in the five years of MTA data published online. And 41% of bus riders commuted without paying during the third quarter of 2023.

Bobin said his teams make thousands of arrests and issue thousands of summons to some of the worst subway cheats every year.

The fare-beater evasion squad issues fines between $50 to $100 for skipping out on the $2.90 fare. They wear body cameras under their jackets and flash their shields to many of those they apprehend who don’t believe they are cops.

“The goal is not necessaril­y making arrests, it’s to correct behavior,” Bobin said.

In fact, two different sets of tourists, one group Haitian and one French, who seemed confused by their surroundin­gs, were let go on their way by the transit cops after they determined they hadn’t deliberate­ly come through the emergency gate without paying.

“We’re out here and we’re doing our job and we’re stopping large numbers of people,” Sgt. Fernando Cordero, who was heading one of the units Tuesday, told The Post. “It may seem like we’re up against big odds but we’re here, we’re a real presence and the average person who gets caught is usually too embarrasse­d to do it again.”

The link between fare evasion and crime was dramatical­ly highlighte­d last week when Dajuan Robinson, 36, went through the emergency gate at Nostrand Avenue — then allegedly started a fight on board a rush-hour A train approachin­g Hoyt-Schermerho­rn station in Brooklyn, which ended with him being shot with his own gun.

Two of the undercover transit team officers in the Times Square deployment were at the station during that incident — and one had to give CPR to Robinson.

“It was a crazy situation, no doubt about it,” the officer told The Post. “I hadn’t quite seen anything like that but it’s the type of thing we face every day.”

‘Drop in the bucket’

But when it comes to the 1,200 specialize­d transit cops, officers say it’s just not a fair fight as they try to stop fare-beating at 472 stations on the city’s 24 lines.

Transit cops are being boosted by 1,000 regular NYPD officers in a “policing surge” at the busiest times, while Gov. Hochul ordered 1,000 more state troopers, National Guard members and MTA officers to carry out bag checks on the subway.

But the cop presence is still a “drop in the bucket,” a source said. “They just aren’t going to be able to patrol a system that big to any real degree of satisfacti­on even with the surge policing.”

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