Mexican man killed in New York City subway shooting

A 35-year-old Mexican man was killed in a shooting on the New York City Subway on Monday afternoon, authorities said.

Five other people were wounded in the shooting, which occurred on a train when it was at the Mount Eden Avenue station in the Bronx.

Police have released security footage of the men wanted in connection with the shooting. (NYPD)

On Tuesday morning, New York police identified the man who died as Obed Beltrán-Sánchez. He was shot in the chest and died at the scene, Reuters reported.

Mexico’s consul general in New York said on the X social media platform that the victim was from Tehuacán, a city in the state of Puebla.

“Unfortunately, yesterday afternoon, a compatriot from Tehuacán, Puebla, died from a stray bullet at the Mount Eden subway station,” Jorge Islas wrote.

“… I personally conveyed our condolences to his family and offered the consular support and advice within our reach. RIP.”

Police said that Beltrán-Sánchez had no permanent address. It was unclear how long he had been in the United States or whether he was working in New York.

New York police officials said that the shooting occurred amid a dispute between two groups of young men traveling on the same train. Beltrán-Sánchez was a bystander, according to local reports.

Michael M. Kemper, the Police Department’s chief of transit, told a press conference that a person involved in the dispute fired a shot when the train arrived at the Mount Eden Avenue station. A number of other shots were fired as passengers disembarked the train and ran for cover, Kemper said.

The five wounded people are aged 14 to 71 and were expected to recover, police said.

Reuters reported Tuesday afternoon that police were searching for three men suspected of killing Beltrán-Sánchez and wounding five others.

“Transit officials emphasized this week that shootings [on the New York Subway] are especially uncommon,” the news agency reported.

“In 2022, when a man with a handgun injured 10 people on a train passing through Brooklyn, it was the first mass shooting attack on the subway system since 1984.”

With reports from MilenioThe New York Times and Reuters

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
For Mexico's searching mothers, the inaugural match of the 2026 FIFA World Cup was an important opportunity to keep the country's crisis of disappearances front and center.

‘All eyes are on the World Cup’: How Mexico’s searching mothers are seizing the tournament to fight for the disappeared

0
Protesters packed southern Mexico City on the first day of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, drowning out the celebrations with a reminder that behind the spectacle, tens of thousands of families are still searching for their missing loved ones.
Cozumel Dwarf fox

Cozumel’s dwarf fox lives! Mysterious canid gets a ‘second chance’ 20 years after its last sighting

0
After millennia separated from the gray fox, the Cozumel fox is referred to as "dwarf" for the simple reason that it has evolved to be at least 60% smaller than its mainland relatives.
Mexican peso 500 peso bills

Peso nears its best rate of 2026 as US-Iran tensions ease

0
The peso opened Friday at 17.20 per dollar, its strongest level in nearly four months, as Trump's comments on an Iran deal lifted investor appetite for emerging market currencies.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity