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‘Subway surfing’ in New York City leaves a grisly, lethal toll

  • Reports of people riding outside of carriages on America’s largest subway system quadruple in a year
  • Transport officials say viral videos of ‘surfing’ youngsters on TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat caused spike

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Reports of people traveling outside of cars - including on top of and between carriages - soared from 206 in 2021 to 928 in 2022. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

One-time subway “surfer” Isa Islam has a straightforward message for thrill-seeking youngsters sparking a surge in riders travelling on the roofs of New York City trains: don’t do it.

Islam was left partially blind when his head smacked into a metal beam at an underground station in Brooklyn as he rode atop a subway car aged 17 in 2013.

“I went up there just to get an adrenaline rush. It was extremely stupid,” the now 27-year-old said, recalling his first and last attempt at so-called subway surfing.

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Reports of people riding outside of carriages on America’s largest subway system have quadrupled in one year, according to newly released data.

Transport officials blame videos of youngsters performing the daredevil stunts on social media for causing copycat attempts.

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The death of a 15-year-old boy last month, which followed that of another teenager in December, led police to warn the subway is “not a playground”.

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