• Photo
The victim falling down on the tracks at Sandsborg metro station south of Stockholm

A composite image from September 8 CCTV footage made available by Swedish Police on Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012, shows the victim falling down on the tracks at Sandsborg metro station south of Stockholm. (AP Photo/Swedish Police)

  • More Featured Content
Jurors deadlock on Jodi Arias penalty
Jurors deadlock on Jodi Arias penalty

Jurors have deadlocked on a verdict of life or death for Jodi …

Boy Scouts approve plan to accept openly gay boys
Boy Scouts to accept openly gay youths

In one of their most dramatic choices in a century, local …

Hurricane forecast: Another busy Atlantic season
NOAA: Another busy hurricane season

Thursday's outlook calls for 13 to 20 named storms, 7 to 11 …

Thunderstorms slow Oklahoma tornado cleanup
Storms slow Oklahoma tornado cleanup

A band of thunderstorms battered the Oklahoma City area …

Vote on gay Scouts comes at emotional moment
Boy Scouts vote on admitting gays

The Boy Scouts of America's national leadership will vote …

Advertisement

No good Samaritan: Swedes shocked by subway thief

Updated: Thursday, 13 Sep 2012, 9:10 AM CDT
Published : Thursday, 13 Sep 2012, 9:09 AM CDT

STOCKHOLM (AP) — A drunk, middle-aged man falls off a subway platform and is knocked unconscious as his head hits the tracks.

A bystander who witnessed the accident jumps down after him — but not for a daring rescue before the train arrives.

Instead, the witness steals the man's valuables, climbs back on the platform and leaves his victim to be hit by a train.

The man — who was on his way home from a party — survived, but was seriously injured and doctors had to amputate half his left foot, Sweden's TV3 channel reported.

Swedish police now hope that surveillance camera footage of the disturbing incident at a Stockholm subway station early Sunday will help them find and arrest the unscrupulous thief.

Police said Thursday they have received several tips after the video was shown on TV3 this week on Sweden's equivalent to "America's Most Wanted."

It was also shown by several other TV stations.

"To me it's incredible that one could steal or rob from somebody who is lying in such a place where you know that, if I don't do something, then this person will, in a worst-case scenario, get killed by the train that is coming. Because the train is going to come," police inspector Dan Ostman told TV4.

The thief had short, dark hair and was wearing a blue jacket and dark pants. He was described as being between 35 and 40 years old and about 5-foot-9 (175 centimeters).

He calmly walked out of the subway station, waving to the ticket vendor, as a train ran over the victim on the tracks below.

 

Advertisement
Advertisement