NYPD Hunting for Woman Who Abandoned a Baby at a Subway Station During Rush Hour
New York city police have released images of a woman wanted for questioning after an infant girl, with her umbilical cord still attached, was abandoned at the busy 34th Street-Penn Station subway stop in Manhattan during morning rush hour. The baby was found wrapped in a blanket in a passageway connected to the Penn Station complex, the country’s busiest rail hub. Authorities are seeking public help to identify the woman seen briefly on security footage holding a bundle resembling a baby.The infant was taken to a hospital and is in stable condition. Police labeled the incident as endangering the welfare of a child and cordoned off part of the area. Officials highlighted New York’s safe haven law, which allows parents to legally relinquish newborns up to 30 days old at hospitals or staffed police or fire stations without facing prosecution.
New York City police on Tuesday released images of a woman wanted for questioning after an infant girl with her umbilical cord still attached was abandoned at a busy midtown Manhattan subway station.
The baby was left Monday in a passageway at the 34th Street-Penn Station subway stop during the typically crowded morning rush hour.
The subway stop is attached to the broader Penn Station complex — the country’s busiest rail hub, which sits underneath the Madison Square Garden arena.
Authorities are asking for the public’s help in identifying the woman, who is seen on a 2-second security camera video clip on a city sidewalk carrying something that appears to be wrapped in a bundle and holding it like someone would hold a baby.
Woman seen holding newborn that was left in NYC subway station with umbilical cord still attached https://t.co/hGL3G8gGG3 pic.twitter.com/ePsv9IIb1F
— New York Post (@nypost) October 21, 2025
Police are calling it a case of endangering the welfare of a child.
The infant was found unattended and wrapped in a blanket, police said.
She was taken to a hospital for an evaluation and listed in stable condition.
Police said they received reports that an unidentified person had left the baby in the station and fled.
Officials cordoned off a section of the passageway and a staircase with yellow tape afterward.
“I’m calling it the ’Miracle on 34th Street,’” Demetrius Crichlow, president of New York City Transit, told reporters, alluding to the classic Christmas movie.
New York has a law that allows a parent to relinquish a newborn up to 30 days old at a hospital, or at a staffed police or fire station, without fear of being prosecuted.
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