Subway fare beater maces 2 NYPD cops who caught him red-handed: police

An NYPD Officer is seen at the platform at 116th Street and Lexington Avenue Subway station in New York City.
The 57-year-old fare evader sprayed two NYPD cops with mace, police said.

A career criminal blasted two NYPD cops with Mace after they caught him redhanded trying to beat a subway fare through the emergency exit of an East Harlem subway station early Wednesday, authorities said.

Emmanuel Solcio, 57, – who has more than 20 prior arrests — snuck into the No. 6 subway station at East 116th Street and Lexington Avenue just after 3 a.m. – but was caught in the act by two on-duty officers, the NYPD said.

The officers spotted the offense and approached the man – who promptly whipped out a canister and sprayed Mace into the cops’ faces, police said.

The 57-year-old fare evader sprayed two NYPD cops with mace, police said. TNS
The 57-year-old fare evader sprayed two NYPD cops with mace, police said. TNS

Solcio was immediately cuffed, and charged with assault, a fare beating rap, resisting arrest, obstruction of governmental administration, criminal possession of a weapon and disorderly conduct, authorities said.

Both officers were taken to a local hospital, where they were listed in stable condition.

Solcio’s rap sheet includes bustf for burglary, grand larceny, graffiti and criminal mischief, cops said.

In a bizarre February incident, he allegedly drove a stolen car up to a factory warehouse on Bullard Avenue in the Bronx, where he went into an empty locker room and drank soda bottles that had been left in the room, cops said.

Another alleged subway criminal recently used the emergency exit to enter the subway system, authorities said last week.

The suspect was immediately cuffed, and charges are pending. Christopher Sadowski
The suspect was immediately cuffed, and charges are pending. Christopher Sadowski

Dajuan Robinson, 36 – who was repeatedly shot with his own gun after allegedly launching a violent rush hour fight on board an A train approaching the Hoyt-Schermerhorn station – was previously caught on video entering the Nostrand Avenue station through the emergency gate.

“Sometimes people ask why we do such big operations for somebody not paying a $2.90 fare,” NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Operations Kaz Daughtry said at a related press conference Friday. “We are seeing a small group of people, a small group of individuals, who we catch during these fare-evasion operations that are recidivists that have warrants, that have guns, that have knives, yet they don’t pay their fare.”

“So it’s important for us to do these quality-of-life operations. Small things like walking through an exit gate, through an emergency gate, hopping over the turnstile, leads to big things.’’