Police Hunt Knife-Wielding Suspect After Random Stabbing on Chicago Train Platform

Chicago police are searching for a man accused of stabbing a woman in an unprovoked attack at a train station near the University of Illinois Chicago on Saturday night.
According to Fox News, authorities say the 27-year-old victim was sitting on a bench at the UIC-Halsted Blue Line platform when the suspect approached her and stabbed her in the chest without warning.
The woman was rushed to Stroger Hospital, where she was treated for a minor injury and is in good condition, police told Fox News Digital.
Investigators described the suspect as a Black male, approximately six feet tall and weighing between 160 and 180 pounds. He was last seen wearing white pants, white sneakers, an orange hoodie, a brown jacket, and a pink beanie. Surveillance footage also shows him carrying a knife and a gray backpack as he fled northbound on South Morgan Street around 11:15 p.m. on Nov. 8.
As of Tuesday morning, the suspect remained at large.
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The seemingly random assault has drawn comparisons to other recent unprovoked stabbings on public transportation across the country. In August, 23-year-old pizzeria worker Iryna Zarutska was fatally stabbed from behind on a commuter train in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Authorities later charged Decarlos Brown Jr., 34, a man with a lengthy criminal history, in connection with that killing.
Just last week, another man was stabbed and seriously injured on a Charlotte commuter bus in a separate attack, according to the Charlotte Observer.
Meanwhile, federal authorities have pointed to broader crime trends in Chicago, noting a sharp decline in violence since the launch of Operation Midway Blitz, a Homeland Security initiative that began in September during the Trump administration’s crackdown on violent crime and illegal immigration.
Officials say the operation has led to a 16% drop in murders, a 35% decline in shootings, and a 20% reduction in transit-related crimes across the city — though cases like Saturday’s attack show the challenges of maintaining safety in public spaces.