Stamford Advocate

Suspect under arrest in deadly NYC subway shooting

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NEW YORK — A man suspected of abruptly pulling a gun and killing a stranger on a New York City subway train was arrested Tuesday, with police saying his motive for the unprovoked attack was “a big mystery.”

Andrew Abdullah, 25, was expected to face a murder charge in the death of 48-year-old Daniel Enriquez, who was shot to death while heading to Sunday brunch.

Abdullah “targeted this poor individual for reasons we don’t know,” Chief of Detectives James Essig said at a news conference.

The arrest came hours after police posted Abdullah’s name and photo on social media and implored the public to help find him. But after the arrest, police disclosed that officers briefly stopped him after the shooting but let him go because his clothes didn’t match the descriptio­n they were given.

The Legal Aid Society, which is representi­ng Abdullah, said it was just beginning to review evidence and urged the public not to make assumption­s about the case.

“Mr. Abdullah deserves vigorous representa­tion from his defense counsel, and that is what The Legal Aid Society will provide,” the organizati­on said in a statement.

About six weeks after another subway shooting wounded 10 people, witnesses Sunday saw a man pacing the last car of a Q line train heading from Brooklyn to Manhattan, muttering to himself, Essig said. The only words witnesses could make out: “No phones.”

The man pulled out a gun and fired at Enriquez at close range, hitting him once in the chest, police said. The shooter fled after the train arrived at Manhattan’s Canal Street and ditched his gun by handing it to a stranger on the subway stairs, Essig said. Police eventually found the recipient and the gun, which had been reported stolen in Virginia in 2019.

The Legal Aid Society said it had tried since Monday night to arrange for Abdullah to surrender in the subway shooting, but authoritie­s instead made a “completely unwarrante­d and inappropri­ate” decision to apprehend him outside the organizati­on’s office. An inquiry was sent to police.

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