Police bust 2 teens in Queens subway joyride, MTA chief says 'hooligan games' must stop
Feb. 3, 2025, 5:44 p.m.
The incident marked the third time in just over a year where a group of vandals took a subway train for a joyride.

The NYPD arrested two teen boys on Monday for allegedly breaking into an unoccupied R train in Queens last week and driving it down the tracks, according to police.
The joyriders, ages 17 and 15, were hit with charges including reckless endangerment and criminal trespassing. The NYPD alleges they broke into the train along with four other youngsters near the Forest Hills-71st Avenue station on a layup track, which is an area where subway trains are stored when they’re not in service.
The group allegedly damaged glass panels, defaced the train’s security cameras and took it for a ride. MTA officials did not say for how long they drove the train. The NYPD has not yet identified the other four people they say were involved in the incident.
“Those hooligan games cannot happen, and that’s why we’ve stepped up security at key transit locations are actively exploring new technologies to prevent access and control of the operator’s cab,” NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow said in a statement.

The joyride marked the third time in just over a year where groups took subway trains for joyrides. In September, two other teens stole an F train in Queens, got a hold of the controls and crashed it into another train, the NYPD said. And last January, authorities said another group hijacked a train near the same station as last week’s incident.
Crichlow said the MTA is stepping up its security to prevent more break-ins, such as adding loud alarms and modern emergency brakes to subway cars. MTA Chair Janno Lieber last week also said the MTA was looking into installing biometric verification technology that would require workers to scan their fingerprints in order to operate train cars.
“We got to have modern ways of controlling anyone operating it,” Lieber said. “I am now making sure that as we buy new subway cars, we have technology that’s not just a key and a lock and hopefully a yard with some barbed wire around it.”
Teen busted in alleged Queens subway joyride — NYPD says her accomplice is still on the loose