#479 NYC '84: The Case of the 'Subway Vigilante'
Feb 13, 2026
Elliot Williams, CNN legal analyst, former federal prosecutor and author of Five Bullets, provides legal and historical perspective on the 1984 Bernie Goetz subway shooting. He walks through the rainy subway conditions, Goetz’s personality and obsession with safety, the four young men involved, the media’s racial framing, and the strange courtroom theater that followed.
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Subway Environment Shaped Perception
- 1984 subway cars were filthy, graffiti-covered, and perceived as dangerous by many riders.
- That pervasive environment heightened public fear and framed reactions like Goetz's.
Who The Four Young Men Were
- The four victims were Bronx teens heading downtown to break open video game machines for quarters.
- They carried screwdrivers and say they only asked Getz for $5, not to mug him.
Sequence And Severity Of The Shooting
- Goetz shot the four men in sequence after an encounter where one asked him for money.
- One victim, Daryl Cabe, was left paralyzed and later brain damaged.




