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Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,031
Registered: ‎10-22-2018

Forgive me -- I know I overreport Philly crime. But there are things I can't understand.

 

There was another rape in a subway station early this morning. Sadly becoming commonplace. A 40-year-old woman and her 46-year-old boyfriend were in the station at 4:30 am and she was "trying on clothes." OK, maybe she just got off work, he wanted to escort her home to be safe, lots of time between trains at that hour, and she was showing her boyfriend some new purchases. There is a hospital close to that station. 

 

Or am I missing something? I've never seen anyone try on clothes while waiting for a train. Why would the police report that she was trying on clothes?

 

The rapist in a NASA sweatshirt approached them with a gun and demanded sex. Once he left, the couple called 911.

 

Interesting that SEPTA is now hiring social workers as well as police officers to be on duty in the stations.

 

nasasweatshirt.png 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 13,510
Registered: ‎05-23-2010

She had some new clothes and she showed them to her boyfriend. This info is repeated on every news story about this so the info probably comes from the police report. 

Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,995
Registered: ‎10-04-2015

NBC Philadelphia

 

Philadelphia police searched Monday for a bike-riding armed man in a NASA sweatshirt that they say sexually assaulted a woman on a SEPTA Broad Street Line subway platform early in the morning. Investigators said the woman's boyfriend was forced to watch the assault.

 

Police released a pair of surveillance images that show the "violent offender" wanted in the sex assault that took place on a bench after 4:30 a.m. on July 18 in the Snyder subway station in South Philadelphia.

 

"It was a traumatic event that occurred down on that platform," Capt. James Kearney, commanding officer of the Special Victims Unit, said. The 40-year-old woman told police when they arrived around 4:45 a.m. that she was raped on the SEPTA platform.

 

She said that she was with a boyfriend trying on some clothing ahead of the attack, Kearney said. The woman first arrived to the subway platform around 4 a.m.

 

The boyfriend first saw the man in the NASA sweatshirt, but briefly lost track of him before the attack, Kearney said. The attacker pointed a gun at the woman's boyfriend and at her back. He then demanded sex, Kearney said.

 

The boyfriend could be seen in surveillance video with his hands up. "He was made to watch," Kearney said.

 

The man carried a black handgun with a green slide and an extended magazine during the attack and rode a bicycle in the underground, police said.

 

Police recovered DNA at the scene that was being processed, Kearney said.

 

After the attack, the woman and her boyfriend came out of the subway and called police, investigators said.

 

It was unclear if the gates to the station were actually open at the time of the attack, Kearney said.

 

The SEPTA media relations team would only confirm that an incident occurred in the subway station and that Philly police and and SVU were leading the investigation.

 

Investigators described the attacker as being in his mid 20s, standing around 5-foot, 6-inches tall, weighing about 160 pounds, with light brown or hazel eyes who wore a gray NASA hooded sweatshirt, black pants, white sneakers and medical mask.

 

He is considered "armed and dangerous," police said. Police warned anyone who spots the attacker not to approach but to call 911 immediately.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 31,022
Registered: ‎05-10-2010

I think we all know what her was.  Likely she's a "working girl" and she was changing into her regular clothes as she headed home.  Which is irrelevant to her being raped by some pervert.  They are hiring social workers because homeless people, mentally ill people, runaways sleep or seek shelter in train stations.  People who need the help of social workers, not law enforcement.

 

 

 

Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,995
Registered: ‎10-04-2015

 

6 abc news

PHILADELPHIA 

 

SEPTA released the following statement to Action News on safety and security:

"SEPTA knows that riders have concerns about safety and security on the system, and we are addressing them. We are working to increase the visibility of police officers on the system and are actively recruiting new candidates to the SEPTA Transit Police Department. Last month, SEPTA reached an agreement with the Fraternal Order of Transit Police on salary increases that will help with efforts to recruit and retain talented officers.

"In addition to traditional policing, SEPTA has added social workers to help connect members of the vulnerable population with housing and medical services. There are also new outreach specialists deployed on the Market-Frankford and Broad Street Lines to reinforce the rules for riding and serve as eyes and ears for SEPTA Police. When there is an incident on the system, police have access to video from more than 28,000 cameras to aid in investigations and identify offenders."

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,031
Registered: ‎10-22-2018

@Mindy D   Did this story make the national news? That would surprise me.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 13,510
Registered: ‎05-23-2010

@PickyPicky3 @There were news articles from national sources online.

Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,383
Registered: ‎04-16-2011

@chrystaltreeWhy would assume that she was a working girl? I thought that many of those who are sex workers use social media and the internet.  Thank you for stating that it shouldn't matter that she was possibly a working girl.  The criminal acted in the most denumanizing way and should receive two times the maximum punishment,

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,031
Registered: ‎10-22-2018

Re: What am I missing here?

[ Edited ]

It was the phrase "trying on clothes" that got me wondering if something was left unsaid. A simple imprecise word choice can taint the tone of a news report. I don't know if the police PR person said it, or if a reporter chose to use it. To me, there's a difference between trying on clothes and showing someone what you bought. I also thought the victim might be a prostitute. 

 

Had that phrase not been used, it would have never entered my mind.

 

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 19,658
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

I'm sorry, but what woman would change clothes to show her 'boyfriend' new clothes purchases at 4:30 AM on a subway??

 

Play stupid games. win stupid prizes...something is not right with this 'story'.....

You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have.