
Dreadlocked joyrider, 18, who took MTA train on one-stop spin is a repeat transit offender: NYPD
Justine Randall-Pizarro allegedly commandeered the locked N train just after 4 a.m. June 17 at the Broadway station in Astoria before driving it to the 36th Avenue stop, police said.
Pizarro – with her hair styled in reddish-orange dreads, wearing a black hat and black Crocs – entered the train parked in the station's lay-up track through the conductor's cab before the illicit jaunt, according to prosecutors and law enforcement sources.
Advertisement
Justine Randall-Pizarro, who allegedly took a Queens MTA train on a one-stop spin last week, is an 18-yea-old repeat transit offender who racked up a dozen arrests just this year, according to NYPD.
Wikipedia
Investigators believe Pizarro – who fled the scene after the pre-dawn stunt – used a key to get the train running, the sources said.
When detectives questioned Pizarro after her Tuesday arrest, she admitted to hijacking the train while videochatting with a pal and said she had the keys to access it, according to prosecutors.
'I mean, I'm near Astoria. Bet,' she told an investigator, according to a complaint filed in Queens Criminal Court. 'I went to Broadway, and behold – there was a lay-up train there. Still on FaceTime with my homeboy, so I drove it while I was on FaceTime with him.'
Advertisement
'And, I don't know, we was just fooling around, turning up on FaceTime like while I was driving it,' the teen mischief-maker continued. 'And I just drove it to 36th Avenue, got off.'
'I mean I don't do the stealing myself, the people steal the keys for me,' she explained. 'Usually – and I guess they steal them for themselves. But usually, yeah, they do steal them from workers.'
NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said that Pizarro had been arrested 12 times in 2025 – most 'related to transit incidents, whether it be burglary, reckless endangerment, train surfing or larceny from transit property.'
Advertisement
'This person is basically a transit recidivist who keeps breaking into trains,' the chief added. 'When she breaks into them, she moves them, she steals items – train keys, things of that nature.'
'When [Pizarro] breaks into them, she moves them, she steals items – train keys, things of that nature,' NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said.
Wikipedia
Back on June 23 in the Bronx, Pizarro allegedly entered a female conductor's cabin when a No. 5 train was stopped at the last station, Gun Hill Road, and allegedly stole her personal bag, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors had requested that Pizarro be held on $20,000 bail or $60,000 bond, but a judge released her on her own recognizance.
Advertisement
On June 1, she allegedly got behind the controls of another train and took it for an early-morning spin at Van Siclen Avenue in Brooklyn, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors asked for $25,000 cash bail or $50,000 bond, but Judge Masatera Marubashi cut her loose on supervision.
And on May 26 on board an R train at 86th Street and 4th Avenue in Bay Ridge, Pizarro allegedly unleashed pepper spray in an MTA worker's face, according to the criminal complaint.
The DA's office asked for her to be held on $20,000 cash or $40,000 bond, but she was also granted supervised release in that case.
In Sunset Park, Brooklyn on April 21, she allegedly stole a backpack holding multiple items including MTA keys, an MTA radio and an MTA flashlight from the operator's cabin of an R train at 59th Street and 4th Avenue.
On May 15, she allegedly stole a backpack holding keys and an MTA escape mask from a motorman's cabin inside a D train at 86th Street and Bay Parkway, prosecutors said.
Both cases are not eligible for bail by state law, the Brooklyn DA's Office said.
In the April case, prosecutors asked for supervised release, but Judge Philip Tisne released her on her own recognizance.
Advertisement
In the second case, prosecutors were able to ask for bail because of her previous open case – so they requested $2,000 cash or $4,000 bond.
But Judge Jevet Johnson granted Pizarro supervised release.
All four of the Brooklyn cases will be consolidated into one going forward, a DA's office spokeswoman said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
32 minutes ago
- New York Post
Maniac Shane Tamura sprayed nearly 50 rounds during NYC Midtown massacre: cops
Maniac Shane Tamura sprayed nearly 50 bullets during his Midtown massacre — as he shot dead four people, including an NYPD officer, according to police and sources. The deranged gunman sprayed most of the bullets across Rudin Management's 33rd-story offices at 345 Park Ave. — which he entered after mistakenly getting off on the wrong floor during his search for the NFL headquarters, authorities said. Cops recovered 24 discharged shell casings and 15 bullet fragments on that floor, which is where Tamura gunned down 27-year-old Julia Hyman, an associate at the real estate company, before turning the weapon on himself, according to cops' initial investigation. 4 Shane Tamura fired nearly 50 bullets during his rampage. AP Another 23 casings and 13 bullet fragments were found in the lobby and the ground floor of the skyscraper where Tamura, 27, unleashed his Monday rampage, authorities said. Police found more than 800 unspent 357 Magnum Rounds sitting in the black BMW that Tamura was seen exiting while brazenly carrying an M4 rifle just before storming into the Park Avenue building, according to cops. The crazed gunman immediately delivered a fatal shot at NYPD hero Didarul Islam, who was working an extra shift on a security detail, upon entering around 6:30 p.m., then killing 43-year-old Blackstone executive Wesley LePatner as she hid behind a lobby column and building security guard and father Aland Etienne. who was at his desk. Tamura then took the elevator — shockingly allowing one woman to exit the lift unharmed — and dialed up the violence after apparently realizing his plan to target the NFL fell apart, authorities said. 4 Most of the bullets were sprayed on the 33rd floor, which Tamura had accidentally entered while searching for the NFL headquarters. Robert Miller 4 Tamura killed four people, including an NYPD officer working an extra shift as security detial. REUTERS The madman left behind a suicide note revealing he targeted the sports organization because he believed he was suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) — despite not playing the sport past high school. Tamura railed against the NFL in the three-page missive, which referred to Terry Long, the former Pittsburgh Steelers player who was diagnosed with CTE after downing antifreeze to kill himself 20 years ago. 'Please study brain for CTE. I'm sorry. The league knowingly concealed the dangers to our brains to maximize profits,' the note read. 4 Police found more than 800 unspent 357 Magnum Rounds sitting in a black BMW that Tamura left behind. Obtained by NY Post 'They failed us.' The gunman had a history of mental health issues, and investigators found prescription medication for depression and epilepsy in his Las Vegas home, authorities said. Also found in the home was a note in which Tamura revealed he felt like a 'complete disappointment' to his parents, including his retired cop father, sources said.


CBS News
4 hours ago
- CBS News
Suspect in 2023 fatal Bronx car wash hit-and-run charged with manslaughter
A suspect in a fatal hit-and-run at a New York City car wash has been arrested more than two years after the accident killed an employee at the 24-hour business. Trina Bryant was arrested Wednesday after the NYPD said she struck and killed Felix Thomas Bontia in the Bronx in February 2023. She pled not guilty to an 11-count indictment charging her with manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, driving while under the influence of alcohol, and more. According to police, Bryant was driving a Ford Escape with Georgia plates when it veered into a bus lane and struck a Toyota RAV4 that Bontia was drying off on Webster Avenue near 168th Street in the borough's Concourse Village section. Bontia was pinned between the cars and did not survive. Investigators at the time said there were two women in the Ford Escape, the driver and a front-seat passenger, who drove a short distance away before they fled on foot. The accident, which occurred at around 5:30 a.m. on Sunday, Feb. 19, 2023, was captured on surveillance video. Bontia worked at the car wash for about a year while his family was back home in Mexico, CBS News New York reported at the time. His friends and coworkers in the city said they called him Benito Felix. The driver in the RAV4 was hospitalized with minor injuries.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Midtown Manhattan office shooter fired 47 rounds in deadly rampage: Police
The Midtown Manhattan office shooter fired 47 rounds from his M4-style rifle during the rampage, a number that indicates the suspect, Shane Tamura, reloaded his rifle at least once, the NYPD said. There were 23 shell casings and 13 bullet fragments recovered from the lobby of 345 Park Avenue, police said. Detectives also located 24 spent shell casings and 15 bullet fragments on the 33rd floor of the office building, police said. MORE: Timeline of NYC office building shooting: Suspect Shane Tamura allegedly drove from Nevada before targeting skyscraper An additional 800 rounds and a .357 caliber handgun were recovered in Tamura's BMW, which was double-parked outside the building, the NYPD said. Four people, including off-duty New York City police officer Didarul Islam; Blackstone executive Wesley LePatner and security guard Aland Etienne, were killed in Monday's mass shooting. The fourth victim, Julia Hyman, was killed on the 33rd floor. Office cleaner Sebije Nelovic also said she was shot at on the floor. Police said Hyman was the last person Tamura shot and killed before taking his own life. Investigators say they are continuing to look for a motive, but New York City Mayor Eric Adams said it appears Tamura, a former high school football player, was attempting to target the headquarters of the NFL, located in the 345 Park Avenue building but took the wrong elevator and ended up in the 33rd-floor office of Rudin Management. MORE: Manhattan mass shooting suspect Shane Tamura's Las Vegas activities investigated Tamura, 27, worked as a surveillance department employee at the Horseshoe hotel and casino in Las Vegas, a spokesperson for the Horseshoe said on Tuesday. He purchased the rifle used in the shooting for $1,400 from his supervisor at the casino, Rick Ackley, police sources told ABC News. The supervisor complied with the law in the sale, his attorney said in a statement. "Rick Ackley administered the transfer of the firearm used in the tragedy in New York lawfully complying with Nevada and federal gun laws," Ackley's attorney, Chris Rasmussen, said in a statement.