NAEEM DAVIS CONFESSES TO COPS ABOUT PUSHING KI-SUK HAN IN FRONT OF MOVING TRAIN IN NYC

KI-SUK HAN 58-YEAR OLD VICTIM

The suspected subway psycho matter-of-factly confessed to shoving a straphanger in front of an oncoming train — and then standing on the platform to watch the man die, sources said.
“He wouldn’t leave me alone, so I pushed him,” Naeem Davis told investigators, according to the sources. “I saw him get hit by the train.”
Davis, 30, was arrested Tuesday in the death of Ki-Suk Han, who died one day earlier when shoved in the path of a downtown Q train in the 49th St.-Seventh Ave. station.
Davis admitted that he was in the midtown subway station when he and Han bumped into each other on the platform, the sources said Wednesday.
“Motherf-----, get out of my face,” Davis admitted telling the 58-year-old victim just prior to the fatal push.
TUESDAY'S NEW YORK POST FRONT PAGE

The sources said Davis told cops that he remained in the station after shoving Han onto the tracks, and stood there as the train rumbled into the station and struck the helpless man.
The wake for the Queens father was scheduled for Wednesday night at the Edward D. Jamie Funeral Chapel in Bayside, Queens.
Cops planned to put Davis into lineups Wednesday to see if witnesses could place him at the scene of the death.
The suspect was arrested Tuesday just upstairs from the station after a Gray Line sightseeing tour worker pointed him out to cops.
Han, who once owned a midtown dry cleaning business but was recently unemployed, was drinking prior to his run-in with Davis, the dead man’s wife told the Korean Courier newspaper.
The train’s motorman, in an interview recounted his desperate attempts to save Han when the doomed man became wedged between the subway car and the platform.
“If someone can be saved, you have to do what you have to do,” said motorman Terrence Legree. “I wouldn’t want anyone to go through it.”
Legree — who was treated for shock after the fatal accident — said he spotted Han on the tracks and slammed on the emergency brake in a vain attempt to avoid the victim.
“I panned my eyes and saw the guy on the roadbed,” he said. “He was looking at the platform. He never moved.”
The 21-year MTA veteran was struggling to accept what happened on the last run of an otherwise typical shift.
“All kinds of emotions from ‘Why is this happening?’ to ‘Why was that guy down there?’ to ‘What happened?’” said Legree.
“You try to be calm. You try to handle the situation.”
30 YEAR OLD NAEEM DAVIS  (TAKEN FROM SECURITY CAMERA)




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