No Filipino hurt in recent New York subway shooting —Consul General Cato
By HANA BORDEY, GMA News
There are no Filipinos hurt in the latest mass shooting in a subway in New York City, United States of America, a Foreign Affairs official said Thursday. Consul General of the Philippine Consulate General in New York Elmer Cato disclosed this in a tweet citing a report from the New York City Police Department. "The New York City Police Department has just informed @PHinNewYork that there are no Filipinos among the at least 29 people who were reported injured in the mass shooting on the N train in Brooklyn on Tuesday morning," Cato said. Police said the gunman was believed to have acted alone and immediately fled the crime scene. The attack unfolded as a Manhattan-bound subway train on the N line was pulling into an underground station in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood. Ten people were hit directly by gunfire, including five hospitalized in critical but stable condition, authorities said. Police said 13 more people suffered from smoke inhalation or were otherwise injured in the chaos as panicked riders fled the smoke-filled subway car. Some collapsed to the pavement as they poured onto the platform of the 36th Street station. The fire department said two of those hurt were treated at the scene.—AOL, GMA News
There are no Filipinos hurt in the latest mass shooting in a subway in New York City, United States of America, a Foreign Affairs official said Thursday. Consul General of the Philippine Consulate General in New York Elmer Cato disclosed this in a tweet citing a report from the New York City Police Department. "The New York City Police Department has just informed @PHinNewYork that there are no Filipinos among the at least 29 people who were reported injured in the mass shooting on the N train in Brooklyn on Tuesday morning," Cato said. Police said the gunman was believed to have acted alone and immediately fled the crime scene. The attack unfolded as a Manhattan-bound subway train on the N line was pulling into an underground station in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood. Ten people were hit directly by gunfire, including five hospitalized in critical but stable condition, authorities said. Police said 13 more people suffered from smoke inhalation or were otherwise injured in the chaos as panicked riders fled the smoke-filled subway car. Some collapsed to the pavement as they poured onto the platform of the 36th Street station. The fire department said two of those hurt were treated at the scene.—AOL, GMA News
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