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San Francisco subway train shooting kills 1, wounds another

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Police personnel confer outside the entrance to the Castro Muni Metro station following a shooting in San Francisco, Wednesday, June 22, 2022. One person was killed and another was wounded in a shooting on a crowded subway train early Wednesday, Supervisor Myrna Melgar said. (AP Photo/Janie Har)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — One man was killed and another was wounded in a shooting on a subway train in San Francisco Wednesday morning that ended in the city's historically LGBTQ neighborhood just days before Pride celebrations, police said.

The shooting occurred shortly before 10 a.m. on a commuter train as it pulled away from a residential station toward the station in the city's Castro neighborhood. There, officers found two victims, one dead at the scene. The other person, a bystander, was taken to a hospital with an injured knee, said San Francisco Supervisor Myrna Melgar, whose district includes the residential Forest Hill station.

She said witnesses reported 3 or 4 shots and a “heated verbal argument” between the suspect and deceased victim. She said the suspect ran out with other passengers when the train stopped.

“The incident that took place this morning is unnerving and yet another reason why we need to do more to prevent gun violence. There are too many guns out in our society, escalating a verbal argument into a senseless death of a young life,” Melgar said later in a press statement.

Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, who represents the Castro District, said the victim and suspect appeared to know each other.

“It's cold comfort but it does not appear that this was random,” he said. “It was not someone who, you know, got on the train and just started shooting, which would have been even more horrible. This was horrible enough.”

Police provided few details Wednesday on what happened or how many people were on the train, although Melgar initially said on social media that the train was packed. They have not released information on the victims or the suspect but said the public was not at risk.

San Francisco police spokeswoman Officer Kathryn Winters said Wednesday’s shooting doesn’t appear to have targeted the LGBTQ community or to be connected to the weekend’s upcoming Pride events.

The station where the suspect ran out is at the heart of San Francisco’s famous Castro neighborhood, which is internationally known for its LGBTQ activism. The shooting comes just four days before San Francisco’s Pride parade, which typically draws thousands of people from around the world, and people are on edge amid a wave of threats to the LGBTQ community.

The shooting is believed to have been the first ever on a train with the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency — also known as Muni. The agency operates most public transit in the city, including trains, buses, streetcars and San Francisco’s iconic cable cars.

Erica Kato, a spokeswoman for the transit agency, said she did not know how many passengers were on board but noted that overall ridership is about half of what it was before the pandemic. She said ridership to San Francisco's downtown core is even less.

Thousands are expected to pack the Castro this weekend but sidewalk traffic was light Wednesday morning.

"Never heard of anything like this over here," said Deeno Nasher, manager of the Castro Smoke House. “It’s kind of concerning for this neighborhood because Pride is this weekend and they try to be safe and secure as possible, and for something like this to happen, kind of puts them on edge.”

Police were looking for a man described only as wearing dark clothes and a dark hooded jacket. Winters said all Muni trains and subway stations have cameras, and police were reviewing the footage.

Subway service had been restored by the afternoon.

Olga R. Rodriguez And Janie Har, The Associated Press


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