The Man Whose Corpse was Sexually Abused on NYC Subway was a Hardworking family man
- Victor Nwoko
- Apr 16
- 3 min read

Jorge Gonzalez, a 37-year-old father and immigrant from Mexico, has been remembered by his family as a devoted and hardworking man whose life was tragically cut short before being further violated in a horrific act on a Manhattan subway train. Jorge Gonzalez's lifeless body was sexually abused on the NYC subway, and his pocket ransacked by another passenger
Gonzalez, who had lived in the United States for approximately two decades, died on an R train last week under mysterious circumstances. Shortly after his death, his lifeless body was sexually violated by an unidentified suspect, who remains at large. The disturbing incident occurred around 11:45 p.m. on April 8, and the perpetrator was seen exiting the train at the Whitehall Street station in Lower Manhattan shortly after midnight. Surveillance footage captured the act, prompting an active investigation.
The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has stated that an initial autopsy was inconclusive, with further examination needed to determine the exact cause of death. Preliminary reports suggest Gonzalez may have died of natural causes.

Gonzalez’s estranged wife, Teresa, 38, spoke out about the man behind the headlines, urging the public to remember him as more than just a victim of a gruesome crime.
“He wasn’t just a random person, he was a father, he was a family man, he cared about his family in Mexico,” she said. The couple had married in 2012 and shared a 13-year-old son, though they had been separated for about six years. Teresa, a Brooklyn-based analyst, emphasized that Gonzalez was deeply loved and missed by those close to him.
“He had so many dreams and so many goals that he wanted to achieve,” she added. “He was somebody who had people that love him, who miss him, and who would have wanted something better for him.”

Despite battling alcohol addiction and cirrhosis, Gonzalez continued working a variety of jobs to support his family. “He did construction, he worked in kitchens, he worked as a waiter, he was a busboy. Anything you really could do to try to get ahead,” Teresa recalled.
Gonzalez often struggled with substance abuse, which led to periods of riding the subway system while drinking. His wife explained that these challenges eventually caught up with him. “He had been suffering,” she said. “He had cirrhosis, so that pretty much just caught up to him.”
Authorities are also seeking a woman spotted rummaging through Gonzalez’s pockets after he was found unconscious. The desecration of his body has sparked outrage and heartbreak among loved ones, with Teresa pleading for justice and the apprehension of the individual responsible.

“I want to see him caught,” she said. “I don’t understand what’s going through this person’s mind to do something like that to a lifeless body. I want this person off the streets. If he’s willing to do that, what else is he willing to do?”
Teresa is currently working to repatriate Gonzalez’s remains to Mexico so that his mother and family can say a final goodbye and give him a proper funeral.
“I just don’t understand how something like that could happen,” she said. “I really don’t understand.”
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