Uniformed and plainclothes police officers stand outside a New York subway station after a man was killed after falling into the path of a train, Monday, Dec. 3, 2012. Transit officials say police are investigating whether he could have been pushed onto the tracks. |
NEW YORK (AP)
-- Police questioned a suspect Tuesday in the death of a New Yorker who
was pushed onto the tracks and photographed just before a train hit him
- an image that drew virulent criticism after it appeared on the front
page of the New York Post.
Investigators
recovered security video showing a man fitting the description of the
assailant working with street vendors near Rockefeller Center, New York
Police Department spokesman Paul Browne said.
Witnesses
told investigators they saw the suspect talking to himself Monday
afternoon before he approached Ki-Suck Han at the Times Square station,
got into an altercation with him and pushed him into the train's path.
Police took the man into custody Tuesday, but he hasn't yet been charged.
Han,
58, of Queens, died shortly after being struck. Police said he tried to
climb a few feet to safety but got trapped between the train and the
platform's edge.
The Post published a photo on
its front page Tuesday of Han desperately looking at the train, his
arms reaching up but unable to climb off the tracks in time. It was shot
by freelance photographer R. Umar Abbasi, who was waiting to catch a
train as the situation unfolded.
Abbasi said
in a video interview on the Post's website that he used the flash on his
camera to try to warn the train driver that someone was on the tracks.
He said he wasn't strong enough to lift Han.
"I wanted to help the man, but I couldn't figure out how to help," Abbasi said. "It all happened so fast."
Emotional
questions arose Tuesday over the published photograph of the helpless
man standing before the oncoming train accompanied by the headline that
read in part: "This man is about to die."
The
moral issue among professional photojournalists in such situations is
"to document or to assist," said Kenny Irby, an expert in the ethics of
visual journalism at the Poynter Institute, a Florida-based nonprofit
journalism school.
Other media outlets chimed in on the controversy, many questioning why the photograph had been taken and published.
"I'm sorry. Somebody's on the tracks. That's not going to help," said Al Roker on NBC's "Today" show as the photo was displayed.
CNN's
Soledad O'Brien tweeted: "I think it's terribly disturbing - imagine if
that were your father or brother." Larry King reached out to followers
on Twitter to ask: "Did the (at)nypost go too far?"
Subway
pushes are feared but fairly unusual. Among the more high-profile cases
was the January 1999 death of Kendra Webdale, shoved her to her death
by a former mental patient.
After that, the
Legislature passed Kendra's Law, which lets mental health authorities
supervise patients who live outside institutions to make sure they are
taking their medications and aren't a threat to safety.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Tuesday that he believed that "in this case, it appeared to be a psychiatric problem."
The mayor said Han, "if I understand it, tried to break up a fight or something and paid for it with his life."