"I don't come close to the edge until a train comes," Morris said as she waited in the Times Square station. "There's too many crazy people in the world."
On December 3, Ki-Suck Han was killed after being shoved onto subway tracks in Manhattan as a train entered the 49th Street station near Times Square. A suspect, Naeem Davis, has been charged with second-degree murder.
Including Thursday's incident, 139 people were struck by New York City subway trains so far in 2012, 54 of them fatally, a Metropolitan Transportation Authority spokesman said on Friday, adding that the tally was preliminary and subject to change.
Police Commissioner Ray Kelly indicated the department would not be adding more police to platforms anytime soon.
"We think we are properly deployed in the transit system," he said at a news conference on Friday.
One solution might be installing safety doors along subway platforms that block access to the tracks until a train arrives, something in use in several major cities around the world, said New Yorker Tom Walker as he waited for a subway.
New York's subway system, which is more than 100 years old and is one of the world's busiest, does not have barriers between the platforms and the tracks.
"It's an antiquated system. Of course people are going to fall in," Walker said.
(Additional reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Paul Thomasch and Leslie Adler)
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