Passengers held up phones but did not help as woman was raped on US subway
- ‘Horrendous criminal act’ could have been stopped quickly if passengers had called police instead of just recording the more than 40-minute incident
- Surveillance video shows the victim attempted to rebuff her attacker, repeatedly pushing him away as he groped and ultimately sexually assaulted her
The rape of a woman aboard a Philadelphia subway witnessed by as many as 10 passengers, some of whom appeared to film the attack, could have been stopped quickly if one had called 911, police said on Tuesday.
The woman was raped shortly after 9pm on October 13 on a train run by Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (Septa), which provides public transport in Philadelphia, Septa Transit Police Chief Thomas Nestel said.
“As many as 10 people actually saw some part of the attack on this rider,” Nestel said on Philadelphia radio station WPHT.
Describing police review of surveillance video, Nestel said: “We were watching to see if somebody put a phone up to their ear indicating they might be calling 911. Instead, what we saw was people holding their phone up as if they were recording or taking pictures.”
“It may have been stopped sooner if a rider called 911,” Septa spokesman John Golden said in a statement, referring to the US phone number for emergency services. A Septa statement called it a “horrendous criminal act”.
Septa and the Upper Darby Police Department, which is investigating the incident, did not immediately confirm other details of the incident reported by local media.