Griselda Vile said her brother's death was senseless and preventable.
As CBS2's Ali Bauman reported, Griselda Vile said her brother wasn't even supposed to be on the train.
Enriquez worked in the research department at Goldman Sachs. He lived in Park Slope with his partner of 18 years and was a doting uncle. "This is negligence on Uber and this should be public. Enough with surge hikes," Vile said."You know, New Yorkers don't feel safe taking the train. We don't even feel safe in our neighborhood."
"It's an incredible setback for everybody's effort to put New York back on normal footing," MTA head Janno Lieber said. to put more cops along the rails as he made a point to publicly ride the train to City Hall.Vile said despite her brother's death, she has not choice but to continue commuting on the subway. She's asking the mayor, police and MTA to make sure her brother did not die in vain.