The Day

Teen’s subway surfing death is latest in disturbing NYC trend

- By MICHAEL GARTLAND and EVAN SIMKO-BEDNARSKI

— The death of a 15-year-old subway surfer trying to ride a train across the Williamsbu­rg Bridge is the latest in a long line of fatalities among daredevils illegally riding the rails atop train cars.

The MTA says it doesn’t keep statistics on how many subway surfing busts it makes. But agency data show a sharp spike in incidents of people riding outside train cars — nearly double prepandemi­c numbers.

A whopping 928 people were found riding outside subway cars last year, more than four times as many incidents as in the previous two years. In 2019, the last full year of data before the pandemic tanked subway ridership, 490 people were caught riding outside a train car.

An MTA spokesman told the Daily News that the agency’s data do not specify whether riders were found “surfing” a subway train or simply riding between cars.

But the uptick in incidents mirrored subway surfing videos going viral last spring and summer, the spokesman said, with violations dropping again in the fall.

“We’re going to do a series of things to raise awareness,” Mayor Adams vowed Tuesday, describing the teen’s death Monday as “really traumatic.”

“This was really a terrible tragic incident of this young man. Our team is going to do a host of things, to bring awareness, to speak with young people and really show how dangerous it is.”

Zackery Nazario climbed to the top of a J train as it passed over the Williamsbu­rg Bridge, which connects Manhattan and Brooklyn, on Monday night. He was run over by the train after being knocked to the tracks by an overhead beam and died at the scene.

“I cannot imagine the pain, suffering and heartbreak going on right now in this child’s family,” NYPD transit chief Michael Kemper said at Tuesday’s meeting of the MTA’s board. “Tragedies like this are avoidable. Don’t do it.”

The boy’s death comes less than three months after another 15-year-old boy, Ka’Von Wooden, was killed in December while trying to surf another J train near the same spot. Ka’Von died after falling onto the third rail outside the Delancey St.-Essex St. station. He suffered severe head trauma died at the scene, police said.

“We have some incidents where some young people survive from doing it,” Adams said Tuesday. “But when it doesn’t our young people have a tendency to believe it’s not a dangerous encounter. It’s very dangerous.”

Train surfing is illegal under the MTA’s rules and regulation­s, which penalize train surfing under the same regulation as moving between subway cars. Violators are subject to a $75 fine.

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