The man accused of shoving a stranger in front of an oncoming subway train has been pictured for the first time as he's marched through a station in handcuffs.
Kamel Hawkins, 23, was charged with attempted murder and second-degree assault following the sickening random attack on Tuesday afternoon.
Surveillance video showed the unnamed victim, 45, standing by the edge of the platform as the train approached at 18th street in Chelsea, Manhattan about 1.30pm.
Hawkins, wearing a mask, paced behind the man for several seconds before pushing him onto the tracks as a train approached. The man miraculously survived.
Pictures show the moment Hawkins was captured by police and escorted through the subway into custody.
In the photographs, Hawkins is wearing a grey hooded sweatershirt and navy pants, having changed out of the clothes he was wearing at the time of the assault.
Kamel Hawkins, 23, was charged with attempted murder and second-degree assault following the sickening random attack on Tuesday afternoon
Pictures show the moment Hawkins was captured by police and escorted through the subway into custody
In the photographs, Hawkins is wearing a grey hooded sweatershirt and navy pants, having changed out of the clothes he was wearing at the time of the assault
In the photographs, Hawkins is wearing a grey hooded sweatershirt and navy pants, having changed out of the clothes he was wearing at the time of the assault
A law enforcement official told the New York Post the man survived because 'he fell perfectly in the trench,' describing the near miss as an act of God.
According to the publication, Hawkins has a pending assault cases going through the courts.
He was allegedly charged with assault in June 2019 after attacking a police officer, and was charged on October 12 for assault, harassment and possession of weapons.
Cops said the subway shover did not appear to know the victim, and described it as a random attack.
Two young men who jumped the turnstile to avoid paying for their ticket just seconds before then turned and fled after witnessing the shocking attack.
It is the latest in a string of concerning attacks on the New York City subway system, after a woman was tragically and fatally set alight by a stranger earlier this month.
Separate footage shared by stunned passengers later showed the moment the victim was rescued from under the train.
Around a dozen firefighters were worked to pull the man from the subway tracks. Authorities said the victim, who appeared to have blood on his face, was hospitalized in critical condition.
Shocking footage captured the moment a man was shoved underneath a New York City subway by a masked assailant who fled the scene
Cops launched an urgent manhunt for the 23-year-old suspect, who was taken into custody several hours later. Charges against him are pending
Separate footage shared by stunned passengers later showed the moment the victim was rescued from under the train, as bystanders breathed a sigh of relief to see he survived
Video shared by stunned passengers showed around a dozen firefighters working to pull the man, who appeared to have blood on his face, from the subway in Manhattan
An NYPD officer stands guard after the subway on Manhattan's 18th Street was closed off
He is expected to survive the incident, but has suffered an injury to his head and has a broken rib, NBC reported.
A woman filming the encounter could be heard expressing her relief that the victim had survived as he was helped onto the platform.
'He's alive!' she said, before turning to other passengers and repeating: 'He's alive.'
The subway platform was evacuated and the NYPD closed the scene as they investigate the incident.
Tuesday's incident took place just hours before up to one million people are expected to pack out nearby Times Square to celebrate the end of 2024 and ring in the new year.
Travelers are directed to use the subway amid mass road closures, with increased services coming into and out of the city.
The latest incident will put more pressure on officials to bring an end to horror subway attacks.
On Christmas Eve, two people were injured in Manhattan's Grand Central Station after a maniac went on a stabbing rampage.
Sources told DailyMail.com at the time that a 28-year-old man slashed two strangers with a knife in the seemingly random attack just after 10pm at the busy tourist hotspot.
And just days before, the Big Apple was stunned when a homeless woman was set on fire and burned to death while she slept on a subway car.
The victim was identified Tuesday by the NYPD as Debrina Kawam, a 61-year-old homeless woman from New Jersey.
Kawam's murder captured international headlines as people were left reeling by the response of the NYPD.
An officer was seen walking past the victim while she was still ablaze, while the man who allegedly set her on fire - illegal immigrant Sebastian Zepeta - stood by fanning the flames with his jacket.
Zepeta, 33, is facing murder and arson charges following the horror incident.
Officials used fingerprint data, dental records and DNA evidence to identify Kawam, and said she was believed to have been homeless. She was originally from Tom's River, New Jersey.
Kawam was reportedly sleeping on the subway car around 7:30am on December 22 at the Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue station in Brooklyn when she was set ablaze.
The shocking incident is the latest of a string of horror attacks on New York City's subway system, including a homeless woman who was burned to death days before Christmas
Sebastian Zepeta, 33, is facing murder and arson charges following the horror incident
Shocked social media users blasted the police response - describing the behavior of cops caught on camera as 'cowardly' and 'shameful' while calling for them to be named or fired.
Despite widespread outrage at the cop failing to step in, NYPD Commissioner Jessica Titsch praised the police response to the heinous incident as 'an example of great technology and even greater old fashioned police work' during a press conference on Sunday night.
Condemnation of the response from officials was led on Tuesday by New York Congressman Ritchie Torres, who slammed fellow Democrat New York Governor Kathy Hochul.
Condemnation of the response from officials was led on Tuesday by New York Congressman Ritchie Torres, who slammed fellow Democrat New York Governor Kathy Hochul
The woman who was set on fire and burned to death on a New York City subway car has been identified as Debrina Kawam of New Jersey
The same day Kawam was identified, Hochul shared a tweet boasting of 'dedicating our efforts to putting more money in your pockets and building an Empire State where everyone has an opportunity to succeed.'
Torres said in response: 'On the same day the murder victim of the subway fire, Debrina Kawam (61) was finally identified, Governor Hochul feels the need to take a victory lap.
''Mission accomplished' is the ultimate form of gaslighting.'