Police searching for gunman in fatal shooting on NYC subway
New York City Police officers are searching for a gunman after a subway passenger was shot and killed in what investigators describe as an unprovoked attack.
The suspect was pacing back and forth in the last car of a Manhattan-bound Q train as it crossed over the Manhattan Bridge around 11:45 a.m. Sunday when he pulled out a gun and "without provocation" fired it at a 48-year-old passenger at close range, striking him in the chest, witnesses told investigators, NYPD Chief of Department Kenneth Corey announced at a press conference.
When the train pulled into the Canal Street station -- the first Manhattan stop on the Q line -- the suspect fled, Corey said, describing him as dark-skinned with a beard and "heavy-set" and last seen wearing a dark-colored sweatshirt, gray sweatpants and white sneakers. He is still at large.
Emergency responders attended to the victim at the scene, Corey said. He was transported to Bellevue Hospital, where he later died. The NYPD identified the victim as Daniel Enriquez.
No others were injured in the shooting, Corey said.
Preliminary information suggests there was no prior contact between the victim and suspect, Corey said.
Witnesses who may have photos or video of that altercation are asked to share them with investigators.
Enriquez's sister, Griselda Vile, told ABC News he started playing guitar and piano during the COVID-19 pandemic, was learning Brazilian Portuguese and had completed the family's genealogy for the past 400 years.
He was a son of Mexican immigrants who earned a master's degree from New York University, and worked for Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, she said. Vile described him as "a loving son, brother and partner" who was "generous" and "lived life to the fullest.'
Sunday marks the second New York City subway shooting in recent months.
On April 12, 10 people on board the N train were shot as it approached the 36th Street station in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood. The alleged gunman, Frank James, is being held without bail on charges of carrying out a terror attack against a mass transit system and discharging a firearm during a crime of violence.
Corey said Sunday that the NYPD is committed to protecting the city's mass transit system and will continue to place officers at stations and aboard trains on patrol.
"We put a lot of additional officers down into the subway system," he said. "We continue to do that to patrol this very extensive transit system that we have."
ABC News' Will McDuffie, Matt Foster, Aaron Katersky and Alondra Valle contributed to this report.