This Article is From Nov 19, 2014

Police Nab Man Sought After Fatal New York City Subway Shove

New York: Police on Tuesday apprehended a man wanted for questioning after the death of a stranger who was shoved into the path of a train at a subway station.

Kevin Darden was picked up by detectives Tuesday evening, according to police, who said he is a suspect in a separate incident in which a man was pushed to the ground at another subway station and suffered minor injuries earlier this month. Charges are pending in that case, police said.

Darden was in custody Tuesday night and couldn't be reached for comment by telephone. It was unclear if he had a lawyer.

Wai Kuen Kwok was standing with his wife on a platform at the Grand Concourse and East 167th Street station in the Highbridge neighborhood of the Bronx on Sunday when he was pushed from behind by a man. Kwok, 61, was struck by an approaching southbound D train and died at the scene. His wife wasn't injured.

There was no indication that Kwok knew the man or had had any interaction with him before he was pushed, police said. His wife said she did not recognize the man.

The man fled the station and two minutes later hopped on a bus with other people who had been on the platform at the time of the push and unknowingly discussed it while he was nearby, police said.

Surveillance footage shows the man walking calmly from the subway station. Later footage shows him getting off a bus 10 blocks away, heading into a convenience store and then emerging smoking a cigarette.

The victim's wife was taken to a hospital for observation. Relatives told authorities Kwok worked for a kitchen supply company and the couple was planning to have breakfast and do grocery shopping in Chinatown on Sunday.

There were at least two other cases in recent years that involved a person being fatally pushed onto subway tracks.

In December 2012, a homeless man was arrested after a man was pushed in front of a Times Square train that crushed him. A photographer on the platform snapped a series of photos of the man as he was about to be struck, prompting criticism that he instead should have tried to help him.

Later that month, a mumbling woman pushed a man to his death in front of a subway train in Queens.
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