NYC Subway Horror, Only Gets 5 Years

A shocking New York case shows how sanctuary policies and weak transit safety let an illegal immigrant violate a corpse on a subway for 30 minutes — and still walk away with just five years.

Story Highlights

  • Court sentenced Felix Rojas to five years in prison and 15 years supervised release after a guilty plea tied to abusing a deceased man on a Manhattan R train [1][2].
  • Manhattan prosecutors previously indicted Rojas for attempted rape, sexual misconduct, and attempted grand larceny in the subway attack captured on security video [3][4][5].
  • Reports identified Rojas as an undocumented immigrant who had tried to cross the border multiple times, fueling anger over lax enforcement [1].
  • Key court documents and transcripts are not public in this set, leaving details of the exact plea count unclear [2][4].

What The Court Decided And What We Know

New York media and international outlets report that Judge sentenced 44-year-old Felix Rojas to five years in state prison and 15 years of supervised release after he pleaded guilty for abusing the body of 37-year-old Jorge Gonzalez on a Manhattan R train in April 2025 [1][2]. The reports say the assault lasted more than 30 minutes and that the victim had already died before the attack. The public record here does not include the plea transcript, so the exact count of conviction is not shown [2].

Earlier, the Manhattan District Attorney announced a grand jury indictment charging Rojas with two counts of attempted rape in the first degree, sexual misconduct, and attempted grand larceny, describing the victim as “completely physically helpless” [3]. Local television coverage said police arrested Rojas, stated the victim was believed dead before the assault, and said the incident was recorded by security camera [4][5]. Those items frame how prosecutors built the case even if the final plea terms are not in this packet.

Immigration Status And Public Safety Concerns

The New York Post reported that Immigration and Customs Enforcement told the outlet Rojas is an undocumented immigrant who tried to cross the Southern border several times [1]. That detail hits a nerve with riders and taxpayers who see subway crime fueled by open-border failures. New York City’s past sanctuary posture made it harder to remove offenders before they strike again. Voters who ride late at night expect swift removal of criminal aliens, not catch-and-release that ends in tragedy.

The sentence also renews debate over deterrence. Five years for a subway crime this grotesque sounds light to many readers, especially given the victim’s dignity and the public setting. Prosecutors secured a felony result, but without the public plea minutes, we cannot see what evidence limits or legal issues drove the final number [2]. Clarity matters. Families deserve to know why a case that horrified a city yielded this outcome.

Transit Security, Surveillance, And Evidence Gaps

Police and media accounts say station cameras captured the assault and helped identify Rojas, who was later taken into custody [4][5]. Cameras are vital. Riders need working surveillance, real-time monitoring, and officers on platforms when the system is most at risk. Night hours and low-ridership stations see higher per-rider crime risk, which lines up with this late-night attack on the R line [20]. The public record here lacks the video chain-of-custody file, which limits outside review.

Several core records remain out of view in this set: the plea allocution, the sentencing minutes, the judgment of conviction, and the medical examiner’s timing of death. Those would show what Rojas admitted, what the judge relied on, and the exact legal theory behind the sentence [2]. Until those are released, questions about proportionality and the final charge will remain. That is not speculation; it is a simple request for transparency that respects both due process and public safety.

What Leaders Should Do Next

New York leaders should release the plea and sentencing records, within the law, to rebuild trust and explain the five-year term [2]. City Hall and Albany should end policies that shield unlawful entrants who commit crimes and should cooperate with federal immigration detainers for offenders who threaten riders. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority and New York Police Department should surge patrols on late-night trains and at chronic hot spots, and ensure every camera works and is monitored in real time [4][5][20].

For the country, this case is another wake-up call. Border failures spill into daily life, from grocery bills to subway rides. Voters want order, dignity, and equal justice. That starts with enforcing the law, removing criminal aliens, backing the police, and making sure no family ever learns that a loved one’s last moments on a New York train became a scene of horror. Policy must put victims first, not politics.

Sources:

[1] Web – Illegal Alien Who Raped the Body of a Dead Man for 30 Minutes on NYC …

[2] Web – Illegal migrant who raped a corpse on NYC subway is slapped with …

[3] Web – US man gets five years jail for abusing corpse – Punch Newspapers

[4] Web – D.A. Bragg Announces Indictment Of Felix Rojas For Attempted …

[5] Web – Man charged with rape of corpse aboard NYC subway train

[20] YouTube – NYPD seeks suspect in attempted rape at Lower East Side subway …

2 COMMENTS

  1. Send him back to where he came from, and leave him in jail for 20 years, as Time Moule wrote. His kind should never be out in the streets again.

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